![]() I think it's a bit faster because it calculates the bland space on the disc & knows it doesn't have to copy it to the other drive. I used Clonezilla on my last clone & it took a little over 2 hours to do a 1.5TB disc, that has 3 slices. It is LINUX based, is free for individual use & can be found here: I promise) for home use & they make a whole line of Professional IT, server type software too. These guys make a whole line of free stuff (I don't work for them OR get any commission. I've been using it for years without any problems. There are also instructions on how to make a bootable CD/DVD so you can make a true Clone of any disc. I've used it MANY times on my Mac, my Hackintosh (that I built with help from the site we're on) & Linux HDD too. I use their Windows Products for my Windows systems & their version that says "copy any File system" does just that. Not just almost clone the disc.ĮaseUS Disk-Copy is free for home use. It does a sector by sector copy of the disc, a true clone of the disc: give you an EXACT copy of the original disc. It may take a bit longer to do the whole disc booting from a CD, but when you're done, you're done. I use EaseUS "Disk-Copy", but there are a few others that one can burn to a bootable CD/DVD & use that way. The thing to do then is to boot from something else & truly "clone" the drives. The problem is most likely that the since the system is up & fully running, it can't copy the boot block. Here are a couple of other apps that I've used that work great too.Īs a long time engineer with a few years of disc cloning experience, UNIX experience & as a user on the tonymacx86 site, I have to say that "technically" if you're not getting the boot block you're not actually cloning the disc. Building a CustoMac Hackintosh: Buyer's Guide
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