I would like to use the HD Clone Professional Edition, to clone the data currently on my Drive C:, to my Drive F:. Drive C: is my boot-up drive, containing Win XP, and all Program Files. It contains very little data.
Drive E: is my Data Drive. It contains all the data produced by the programs on Drive C: I cannot take a chance of losing all that.
I would like to be able to have a part of Drive E: used as a badkup for Drive C:, so that I could restore the Drive C: in the case of a crash.
The drives are both IDE drives, and are can be described is as follows:
Drive C: is 80 GB, and is using 15 GB of space.
Drive F: is 160 GB, and is using 84.9 GB of space, leaving 64.1 GB of free space.
From my understanding, to clone Drive C to Drive F will result in obliterating all the date currently on Drive F: and replacing it with the data that is currently on Drive C:. This will be the case, even though Drive C: has only 15 GB of data.
So, perhaps, I can use Partition to Partition, and clone only the 15 GB of data to a Partition on Drive F:, so that I still can retain the data currently on F:, and add to it the partition containing the C: date.
However, when I choose that option, I still get the warning that the Data on Drive F: will be overwritten.
On the HD Clone site, description of the program says, "it offers technicians, professional and private users highest possible speed and flexibility through its 'FastCopy' mode and the 'Sector area' option which allows you to define an arbitrary copying area on the medium."
Questions:
1. Given that the data on the target Drive will be overwritten in both cases, what is the difference between Drive --> Drive cloning, and Partition --> Partition?
2. Is it possible to retain any data on the Target Drive?
3. If so, how does one do that?
4. If you wish to use the "Sector Area" Option, how does one "define an arbitrary copying area on the medium?"
5. Having defined such an "arbitrary area", how would I know that that area was, in fact, available, and without data I would wish to keep?
I would appreciate an answer, as I cannot take the risk of destroying my F: drive.
Thanks in advance for any comments.
Peter