starbuck Posted December 17, 2015 Posted December 17, 2015 An image backup copies everything on your drive—operating system, boot sector, programs, and data files—into one compressed but still very large file. If disaster renders your Windows installation useless, an image backup will allow you to get it up and running again quickly. I recommend you create an image backup, saving it to an external hard drive, three or four times a year. This is in addition to the far more important daily file backup of your data. Creating an image backup in Windows 10 Plug in your external hard drive—which should have enough free space to hold everything on your internal drive. Make sure Windows can access the drive. In Windows’ Search field, type file history, and select Control Panel’s File History program. In the File History dialog box, click System Image Backup in the lower-left corner. In the resulting Backup and Restore dialog box (don’t worry about the “Windows 7” label), click Create a system image. Follow the resulting wizard. . The backup may take a few hours. You can continue to work as it backs up. However, I prefer to start the backup at the end of the workday so it doesn’t slow anything down. When the backup is over, you may be asked if you want a System Repair Disc. If your PC has an optical drive, create the disc. If not, create a Recovery Drive: Plug in a blank flash drive, open Control Panel’s Recovery tool, click Create a recovery drive, and follow the prompts. Restore the backup When Windows is in a seemingly hopeless condition, you’ll need to get into the recovery environment to restore the image. Here are three ways to do that: If you can still boot into Windows: Select Start > Settings > Update & security. Select Recovery in the left pane, then select Restart now. If Windows won’t boot and you have a System Repair Disc: Insert the disc into your optical drive and boot your PC. When you’re asked to “Press any key…,” press any key. Then pick a language. If Windows won’t boot and you have a Recovery Drive: Insert the Recovery flash drive into a USB port and boot your PC. If your PC skips the flash drive and attempts to boot Windows, reboot and enter your Setup screen (F2 usually works; if it doesn’t, check your manual). Look for a boot or boot order option. Once you’ve successfully booted the flash drive, select a language. . Once you’re in a recovery environment, select Troubleshoot, then System Image Recovery. Follow the instructions. Source: http://www.pcworld.com/article/3011736/windows/how-to-create-an-image-backup-in-windows-10-and-restore-it-if-need-be.html#tk.rss_windows Quote
FPCH Admin allheart55 Cindy E Posted December 17, 2015 FPCH Admin Posted December 17, 2015 Easy and concise instructions. Thanks, Pete! Quote ~I know that you believe you understand what you think I said, but I'm not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant.~ ~~Robert McCloskey~~
starbuck Posted December 17, 2015 Author Posted December 17, 2015 What I like about it is that it uses tools within Win10. No need for any imaging software. Quote
FPCH Admin allheart55 Cindy E Posted December 17, 2015 FPCH Admin Posted December 17, 2015 I do the same with Windows 8.1 and it works really well. With 7 I use Acronis. Quote ~I know that you believe you understand what you think I said, but I'm not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant.~ ~~Robert McCloskey~~
FPCH Admin AWS Posted December 17, 2015 FPCH Admin Posted December 17, 2015 I just bought software to clone my Windows install for OSX called Winclone. If I had know about this I could have used what was built in to Windows 10 to create a backup image. Quote Off Topic Forum - Unlike the Rest
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