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Macrium Reflect image restored to dissimilar x64 hardware does what?Paging Paul, Flasherly, Mr. Chang
The scenario: I have a x64 bit Windows 10 machine that's a laptop with decent but 5+ year old hardware, e.g., an SSD but an Intel i5 chip with 4 GB RAM.
I wish copy the Macrium Reflect image disc from this hardware to a tricked out, gaming type, state of the art tower PC with say the latest hardware (a bigger SSD but the fastest, with another SSD or HDD in tandem, i7 or AMD Ryzen-whatever multicore machine, 32 GB RAM, etc). Any issues? One issue I see is that with the free version of Macrium Relect, you cannot restore the image file to dissimilar hardware says their home page. So I will upgrade to the Home paid version, however, my question is whether you can pay Macrium one time for the upgrade and it's good for life or whether you have to pay every year? I'm not talking about their 12 month support, with is limited to one year after your purchase a license, but the license for the paid Home version that allows you to restore to dissimilar hardware.. I hate to buy a license then find in 18 months when I do this restore that it's expired for dissimilar hardware restores. The second, bigger issue is whether some programs will break if I restore the old image file onto newer hardware? I suspect some programs will, but I'm guessing MS-Office, my Visual Studio program I use for coding, and maybe some of my chess programs probably won't, unless they have a special key tied to hardware. On this last point, I do realize that upgrading WIndows 10 Home to newer hardware will necessitate I spend $100 or so for a new license from Microsoft, since the old WIndows 10 key is tied to the old hardware, and I'm prepared to pay that. Obviously the main reason for the restore is that I don't want to reinstall a couple of dozen programs (some of which I no longer have the original installation DVD/CDs for). Thanks in advance to the usual posters and some of you newer ones for any advice. RL |
#2
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Macrium Reflect image restored to dissimilar x64 hardware does what? Paging Paul, Flasherly, Mr. Chang
On 10/2/20 10:20 AM, RayLopez99 wrote:
The scenario: I have a x64 bit Windows 10 machine that's a laptop with decent but 5+ year old hardware, e.g., an SSD but an Intel i5 chip with 4 GB RAM. I wish copy the Macrium Reflect image disc from this hardware to a tricked out, gaming type, state of the art tower PC with say the latest hardware (a bigger SSD but the fastest, with another SSD or HDD in tandem, i7 or AMD Ryzen-whatever multicore machine, 32 GB RAM, etc). Any issues? One issue I see is that with the free version of Macrium Relect, you cannot restore the image file to dissimilar hardware says their home page. So I will upgrade to the Home paid version, however, my question is whether you can pay Macrium one time for the upgrade and it's good for life or whether you have to pay every year? I'm not talking about their 12 month support, with is limited to one year after your purchase a license, but the license for the paid Home version that allows you to restore to dissimilar hardware. I hate to buy a license then find in 18 months when I do this restore that it's expired for dissimilar hardware restores. I have upgraded from time to time to get additional features, but it's my understanding that a license for a particular version never expires -- but after a certain (possibly unspecified in advance) date there will be no more bug fixes for that version. The second, bigger issue is whether some programs will break if I restore the old image file onto newer hardware? I suspect some programs will, but I'm guessing MS-Office, my Visual Studio program I use for coding, and maybe some of my chess programs probably won't, unless they have a special key tied to hardware. On this last point, I do realize that upgrading WIndows 10 Home to newer hardware will necessitate I spend $100 or so for a new license from Microsoft, since the old WIndows 10 key is tied to the old hardware, and I'm prepared to pay that. Obviously the main reason for the restore is that I don't want to reinstall a couple of dozen programs (some of which I no longer have the original installation DVD/CDs for). Thanks in advance to the usual posters and some of you newer ones for any advice. I did the restore-to-different-hardware from one Asus desktop motherboard to one a few years newer. I don't recall any problems. Any license keys would have been preserved. I cannot be sure, but I think that *maybe* the restore-to-different-hardware simply zaps out the hardware-specific drivers for the previous hardware and lets the "generic" configuration automatically load the new-hardware-specific drivers instead of trying to run with the wrong drivers. Perce |
#3
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Macrium Reflect image restored to dissimilar x64 hardware doeswhat? Paging Paul, Flasherly, Mr. Chang
On 10/2/2020 8:49 AM, Percival P. Cassidy wrote:
On 10/2/20 10:20 AM, RayLopez99 wrote: The scenario:Â* I have a x64 bit Windows 10 machine that's a laptop with decent but 5+ year old hardware, e.g., an SSD but an Intel i5 chip with 4 GB RAM. I wish copy the Macrium Reflect image disc from this hardware to a tricked out, gaming type, state of the art tower PC with say the latest hardware (a bigger SSD but the fastest, with another SSD or HDD in tandem, i7 or AMD Ryzen-whatever multicore machine, 32 GB RAM, etc). Any issues? One issue I see is that with the free version of Macrium Relect, you cannot restore the image file to dissimilar hardware says their home page.Â* So I will upgrade to the Home paid version, however, my question is whether you can pay Macrium one time for the upgrade and it's good for life or whether you have to pay every year?Â* I'm not talking about their 12 month support, with is limited to one year after your purchase a license, but the license for the paid Home version that allows you to restore to dissimilar hardware.Â* I hate to buy a license then find in 18 months when I do this restore that it's expired for dissimilar hardware restores. I have upgraded from time to time to get additional features, but it's my understanding that a license for a particular version never expires -- but after a certain (possibly unspecified in advance) date there will be no more bug fixes for that version. The second, bigger issue is whether some programs will break if I restore the old image file onto newer hardware?Â* I suspect some programs will, but I'm guessing MS-Office, my Visual Studio program I use for coding, and maybe some of my chess programs probably won't, unless they have a special key tied to hardware.Â* On this last point, I do realize that upgrading WIndows 10 Home to newer hardware will necessitate I spend $100 or so for a new license from Microsoft, since the old WIndows 10 key is tied to the old hardware, and I'm prepared to pay that. Obviously the main reason for the restore is that I don't want to reinstall a couple of dozen programs (some of which I no longer have the original installation DVD/CDs for). Thanks in advance to the usual posters and some of you newer ones for any advice. I did the restore-to-different-hardware from one Asus desktop motherboard to one a few years newer. I don't recall any problems. Any license keys would have been preserved. I cannot be sure, but I think that *maybe* the restore-to-different-hardware simply zaps out the hardware-specific drivers for the previous hardware and lets the "generic" configuration automatically load the new-hardware-specific drivers instead of trying to run with the wrong drivers. Perce I use the version of Acronics True Image that is offered free for hard drives I own by the manufacturer, and can make the hardware changes. Sometimes, you have to load new drivers in the right order to get it working. Issues can be networking or other problems blocking access to the Windows update. The last time I did this, it was from a 2500K to a 8700K processor and motherboard, but with the new boot drive being a MVNE drive, and it was challenging getting the MVNE drive to boot. I believe I had to build the drive on a SATA drive and load the drivers on that, and then enable the MVNE drive and copy that result to the MVNE drive. That was a Win 7 PC. Win 10 might have the drivers you might need from the start. |
#4
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Macrium Reflect image restored to dissimilar x64 hardware doeswhat? Paging Paul, Flasherly, Mr. Chang
RayLopez99 wrote:
The scenario: I have a x64 bit Windows 10 machine that's a laptop with decent but 5+ year old hardware, e.g., an SSD but an Intel i5 chip with 4 GB RAM. I wish copy the Macrium Reflect image disc from this hardware to a tricked out, gaming type, state of the art tower PC with say the latest hardware (a bigger SSD but the fastest, with another SSD or HDD in tandem, i7 or AMD Ryzen-whatever multicore machine, 32 GB RAM, etc). Any issues? One issue I see is that with the free version of Macrium Relect, you cannot restore the image file to dissimilar hardware says their home page. So I will upgrade to the Home paid version, however, my question is whether you can pay Macrium one time for the upgrade and it's good for life or whether you have to pay every year? I'm not talking about their 12 month support, with is limited to one year after your purchase a license, but the license for the paid Home version that allows you to restore to dissimilar hardware. I hate to buy a license then find in 18 months when I do this restore that it's expired for dissimilar hardware restores. The second, bigger issue is whether some programs will break if I restore the old image file onto newer hardware? I suspect some programs will, but I'm guessing MS-Office, my Visual Studio program I use for coding, and maybe some of my chess programs probably won't, unless they have a special key tied to hardware. On this last point, I do realize that upgrading WIndows 10 Home to newer hardware will necessitate I spend $100 or so for a new license from Microsoft, since the old WIndows 10 key is tied to the old hardware, and I'm prepared to pay that. Obviously the main reason for the restore is that I don't want to reinstall a couple of dozen programs (some of which I no longer have the original installation DVD/CDs for). Thanks in advance to the usual posters and some of you newer ones for any advice. RL There should be a PDF manual for Macrium. http://reflect.macrium.com/help/v5/h...w_hardware.htm Example of a PDF. http://updates.macrium.com/reflect/v...df?src=sidebar Paul |
#5
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Macrium Reflect image restored to dissimilar x64 hardware doeswhat? Paging Paul, Flasherly, Mr. Chang
On Saturday, October 3, 2020 at 12:00:31 AM UTC-4, Bob F wrote:
On 10/2/2020 8:49 AM, Percival P. Cassidy wrote: On 10/2/20 10:20 AM, RayLopez99 wrote: The scenario: I have a x64 bit Windows 10 machine that's The last time I did this, it was from a 2500K to a 8700K processor and motherboard, but with the new boot drive being a MVNE drive, and it was challenging getting the MVNE drive to boot. I believe I had to build the drive on a SATA drive and load the drivers on that, and then enable the MVNE drive and copy that result to the MVNE drive. That was a Win 7 PC. Win 10 might have the drivers you might need from the start. Yes, upon researching the issue using the links provided in this thread, I concluded the following: Restoring To New Hardware using Macrium Reflect - note, issue are the drivers for bootup (might not boot up properly). Best to therefore do clean reinstall if possible, otherwise, ReDeploy option in the paid Macrium Reflect is a good second best option. I will probably buy the Home version of Macrium Reflect since if my laptop is physically destroyed I might have to do this ReDeploy to new hardware. Thanks for the replies, RL |
#6
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Macrium Reflect image restored to dissimilar x64 hardware does what? Paging Paul, Flasherly, Mr. Chang
"RayLopez99" wrote in message ... The scenario: I have a x64 bit Windows 10 machine that's a laptop with decent but 5+ year old hardware, e.g., an SSD but an Intel i5 chip with 4 GB RAM. I wish copy the Macrium Reflect image disc from this hardware to a tricked out, gaming type, state of the art tower PC with say the latest hardware (a bigger SSD but the fastest, with another SSD or HDD in tandem, i7 or AMD Ryzen-whatever multicore machine, 32 GB RAM, etc). Any issues? One issue I see is that with the free version of Macrium Relect, you cannot restore the image file to dissimilar hardware says their home page. So I will upgrade to the Home paid version, however, my question is whether you can pay Macrium one time for the upgrade and it's good for life or whether you have to pay every year? I'm not talking about their 12 month support, with is limited to one year after your purchase a license, but the license for the paid Home version that allows you to restore to dissimilar hardware. I hate to buy a license then find in 18 months when I do this restore that it's expired for dissimilar hardware restores. The second, bigger issue is whether some programs will break if I restore the old image file onto newer hardware? I suspect some programs will, but I'm guessing MS-Office, my Visual Studio program I use for coding, and maybe some of my chess programs probably won't, unless they have a special key tied to hardware. On this last point, I do realize that upgrading WIndows 10 Home to newer hardware will necessitate I spend $100 or so for a new license from Microsoft, since the old WIndows 10 key is tied to the old hardware, and I'm prepared to pay that. Obviously the main reason for the restore is that I don't want to reinstall a couple of dozen programs (some of which I no longer have the original installation DVD/CDs for). Thanks in advance to the usual posters and some of you newer ones for any advice. RL Using Acronis True Image Home, I have restored backups from one AMD machine to newer AMD machines a few times with little to no problems, and never had to renew my Win10ProX64 license, or pay for a new one. I've never gone cross-platform (AMDIntel, or IntelAMD). If you are the adventurous type, and have the driver disk for the new PC, you might try the restore to it and boot into safe mode to see if it lets you install the drivers. No matter what, I would try safe mode anyhow- I think there would be less chance of everything getting screwed up at boot. Just my 2 cents worth :-) -- SC Tom |
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