Windows 10 System Image Backup

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  • čas přidán 25. 08. 2024
  • How you survive losing your Windows 10 hard drive?
    In this video I show you how to create a full system image of your Windows 10 Hard Drive. This system image is a backup of EVERYTHING on your hard drive. It can restored to a blank hard drive.
    00:01: Intro
    00:27 What is a Bare Metal Backup?
    00:57 Source and Destination Drives
    01:23 Creating the System Image
    03:32 Backup Results
    05:06 Create the System Repair CD/DVD
    06:41 Restoring your System Image
    09:35 Using a Windows 10 USB install Drive to recover your image
    09:44 Outro
    Part 2 at: Windows 10 Install USB • Windows 10 Install USB

Komentáře • 30

  • @rubyzeng9017
    @rubyzeng9017 Před 2 lety +7

    Here I made system image with AOMEI and restore to another PC, worked like charm!

  • @Vicky-zd3uv
    @Vicky-zd3uv Před 2 lety +4

    Thank you for this tutorial, it worked well for me. And Aomei is also good to do this.

  • @danielfennock3707
    @danielfennock3707 Před 2 lety +4

    I used Aomei to backup my system it's nice.

    • @TheNerdIsIn
      @TheNerdIsIn  Před 2 lety

      There are many such products. Have have also used Acronis True Image.

  • @hunterjoy4346
    @hunterjoy4346 Před 2 lety +2

    You made it very clear and plain, helpful indeed. And I achieved with aomei it's nice.

  • @browninggohk280
    @browninggohk280 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks! I'll be doing this since my Alienware (Dell) got corrupted twice now... not taking any chances anymore.

  • @tjruffian
    @tjruffian Před 3 lety +2

    Great instructional video! Straight and to the point! Thanks so much for sharing!

  • @osintify
    @osintify Před 2 lety +1

    Keep up the good work. Thanks

  • @keyiwan5947
    @keyiwan5947 Před 2 lety +4

    What if my computer cannot boot and I have no system image either

    • @TheNerdIsIn
      @TheNerdIsIn  Před 2 lety

      I would try to start up repair from rescue media or Windows installation disk first. If that did not work I would see if I could roll back to a restore point via the rescue media or Windows installation disk. Last of all I would do an upgrade install over the top of my existing windows.

  • @johndeam5659
    @johndeam5659 Před 2 lety

    When I bought my Windows 10 desktop a couple of years ago, my first action was to do what this video describes. I completed the entire process, with no apparent problems. However, when I checked the system image on the external hard drive, it was an empty shell. Zero gigabytes inside.
    A trawl of the internet revealed that the system image facility had been disabled during a Microsoft update.
    So this video is no longer valid for all PCs operating from that update onward. The problem for many people will be that they don't discover that they have a useless empty shell until they need it to recover their PC. There are literally dozens of videos like this one and not one of them declares the above.
    Edit to update: I created a system image using the method described in this video and, as predicted in my comment above, ended up with an empty shell - 0 bytes, 0 files, 0 folders. It took an hour to create...absolutely nothing.

    • @TheNerdIsIn
      @TheNerdIsIn  Před 2 lety +3

      Before replying to your comment, I went back and completely updated a Windows 10 machine and then created a system image as shown in the video. I then turned around and restored the image back to the lab machine. It worked perfectly. I also did the same thing on an updated Windows 11 machine. Again, it worked perfectly.
      I am not sure what you are seeing. Is it possible that your destination is formatted FAT32? FAT32 has limits on maximum file size that may interfere with the system image utility.

  • @beattydave
    @beattydave Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you for video

  • @TheTugboatpatrick
    @TheTugboatpatrick Před 3 lety +2

    By bare bones you mean like a fresh install, no programs backed up correct?

    • @TheNerdIsIn
      @TheNerdIsIn  Před 3 lety +2

      Yes, boot from USB or DVD and restore the image to a totally blank hard drive.

  • @mikehurley529
    @mikehurley529 Před 2 lety

    Followed your instructions but when I looked at the image file on my external hard drive it showed as being empty and the properties for that file show as 0 bytes. Please help

    • @TheNerdIsIn
      @TheNerdIsIn  Před 2 lety +1

      I have run through the software recently to verify it worked for me. The only thing I can think that might be causing the error is having the external drive formatted with FAT32 or exFAT instead of the NTFS file system.

  • @Dannyongwc5
    @Dannyongwc5 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi, say I replace my laptop 250g m.2 sad to 1tb sad, does it work as well? Gonna do it soon, thanks.

    • @TheNerdIsIn
      @TheNerdIsIn  Před 2 lety

      You should be able to create the system image from the 250 and restore it to a 1TB. That is what I did. After restoring, I had to use disk manager to extend the c drive partition to use all the new space.

    • @Dannyongwc5
      @Dannyongwc5 Před 2 lety +1

      @@TheNerdIsIn Thanks for the reply, I definitely follow what you did. :-)

  • @aragorn4242
    @aragorn4242 Před rokem

    can you use a ssd instead of hard drive ?

    • @TheNerdIsIn
      @TheNerdIsIn  Před rokem

      Absolutely. SSD is just a different type of Hard Drive

  • @alintomulet7000
    @alintomulet7000 Před 2 lety

    Does it work even if you download Win10_21H1_English_x64.iso from microsoft?

    • @TheNerdIsIn
      @TheNerdIsIn  Před 2 lety

      I have my students make a system image and restore it every semester. To my knowledge is works with previous and current versions of windows 10.