Performance is about the same as TI here. I use only the most basic MR functionality. I then do one full backup which takes about 5 hours on my system (while I work with it). I work with four external disks which I swap every week. My external disks are USB 3.0 disks, rather new WD 2 TB disks. I tried merging when I evaluated it, but it was real slow. merging backups may be safe in 99.999% of all cases, but it will fail in the most unwelcome moment. Doing each partition individually gives you more options.ģ. This is because MR rolls back the entire backup when it encounters a problem, e.g., a disk with a glitch that requires a run of chkdsk to fix. Qu2b: How much does the size of full back grow as each deleted increment is merged with it? It only enough information is merged in order to maintain the increment chain then perhaps not all that much, but if the entire increment is merged then I'm not sure I see the point, as there is little if any space saving.Ģ. Qu2a: How much does creating a synthetic backup slow the process down, once you hit the limit? Since restoring a file from an incremental backup requires access to the full increment chain, what MR does is merge any increments that it's deleting to meet this limit with the full backup, to create a synthetic full backup. MR allows you to create a full backup and a series of increments, and to limit the number of incremental backups. Qu 1: Does "Image selected disks on this computer" create a backup of the system C: partition that you can use to restore it in a bootable form to a new virgin drive if needed?Ģ. The problem with the second option is that it only includes the C drive. There are two options - "Image selected disks on this computer" and "Create an image of the partion(s) required to restore Windows". I.e., I could do either from the same backup set. If I wanted to restore individual files I could extract them, and if I needed to restore the system partition, I could restore that as a partition. So I'd create an initial full backup and then a series of increments. With Acronis True Image, what I used to do was backup the partitions / disks C:, D: and E. I have a couple of questions that MR users may be able to assist me with:ġ. I've finally gotten around to installing the trial version of Macrium Reflect, in line with the general consensus of the other thread.
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