Doing a chkdsk with repair option make sure Wionclone does not produce a bad image, I had complained about that to Winclone because I am using Winclone for backups and had a few bad Winclone images. There is a slight chance that the backup image not restorable (been there). Boot the machine in Mac OS, run Winclone, I like to store the BootCamp image on a Third hard drive. When everything done shut down the machine. Machine will enter DOS mode and do chkdsk. Close the window and re-boot the machine. That is: Boot up in Windows, open a CMD windows with Adminstrator, enter chkdsk/b. Do a chkdsk/b on your BootCamp partition before using Winclone. For example, my hard drive had 3 partitions, one for Mac, one for BootCamp and one can be access and modified by either Mac or Windows system. Each individual case operation may be slightly different. pay for Winclone get the latest version and supports if needed and I think that is fair. The procedures outline in this article in general is sound but because Winclone is involved or needed and there is couple cautions have to take. I have done both and I can relate the differences. There is a much difference between “upgrading” your hard drive and “migrating” your BootCamp Windows partition to a new MacBook Pro. The operation is to clone the existing harddrive to a new one and not about migrating the disk. Thanks for the walk through, WinClone wasn't free, but I'm happy to pay for software that makes my life easier, and I have now doubled my SSD drive space without all of the configuration that would otherwise be necessary. Then, to get the Bootcamp partition to appear in the Startup Disk list (I think that is correct, typing this from the office) I had to go into the Tuxera NTFS control panel and set the volume to not use Tuxera (granted, that is not critical since one can always hold Option on boot). Once that was complete, I was able to restore the WinClone image of the original Bootcamp partition and things were fine. I also downloaded the bootcamp software for Windows to a thumbdrive and installed in the fresh Windows 7 install. Anything short of that resulted in a partition that wouldn't show up as a viable boot target (using Option on startup). In order to make all of this work I had to put the optical drive back inside the MBP (it won't boot from a usb optical drive), find my Windows 7 CD, run Bootcamp Assistant, create the partition, and go through the Windows 7 install process. I have a late model 2008 MBP and the optical drive bay has my old platter drive in it. I had a bit of trouble getting the Bootcamp partition set up, though that was partially due to my configuration. It seems that Winclone can only copy the image onto a 'Macintosh' partition and then from that aprtition onto another Bootcamp Then run Winclone 2.3.3 to restore the Bootcamp partition from the Image in Macintosh HD and into the new Bootcamp. Run Winclone 2.3.3 to capture and 'Image' of the old Bootcamp partition (from the USB - SATA connection) - save the image onto the new Macintosh HD partition. In Snow Leopard, used Bootcamp Assistant to split the new hard drive from one partition into a smaller Macintosh HD and a bootcamp partition,(bigger than the old bootcamp partition). Once restore was complete, rebooted into Snow Leopard from the hard drive. Used Utilities to 'Restore from Time Machine'. Then partitioned the drive as one partition 'Macintosh HD'. Used Utilities to Erase the new hard drive. Removed the old drive and put it into an external SATA - USB enclosure. Upgraded the Boocamp partition using Winclone 2.3.3 - the previous version would not work.īacked up the Macintosh partition using Time Capsule. I am running Snow Leopard with Win 7 on Bootcamp. I worry that I may overwrite the original drive etc.Thanks for the information on this site. If this proves to be working fine I guess I could create a script for making further clone backups without worrying about the correct syntax etc. no need to have double the Bootcamp partition size free in order to make a clone). Let's call the internal drive original_SSD and the external, empty USB-attached drive empty_SSD.ĭo I need to prepare the new drive in some way? Partition it for the Mac and Windows partitions, or does "dd" simply make an exact copy of the entire drive anyway? Does it also check that the copy is OK?Īnd does it make a disk image of the Windows (Bootcamp) partition before copying it over (like "Winclone" does), or does it just read from the source drive and write to the destination drive? (i.e. Click to expand.Excellent! I would like to give it a go before needing to buy Winclone or some other commercial app.Īssuming I boot my Mac from a USB flash drive with MacOS on it (and then run the Terminal from it), what is the exact syntax and command(s) for cloning the internal drive over to an external USB attached drive?
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