F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Top affordable backup tools for Windows available online

Top affordable backup tools for Windows available online

Top affordable backup tools for Windows available online

Pages (2): 1 2 Next
P
Phantomz_MC
Member
53
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM
#1
Hey everyone, just wrapped up setting up my PC. Everything is installed and current. Now all my programs, games, and stuff are ready to go. Before I begin, I want to create a snapshot of my system so I can revert everything if needed. Ghost didn’t work on this build—it doesn’t detect my drives. Since I’m new to this setup, I’m unsure which tools are best or what the right terms mean. I’d like to regularly make full images of all my drives. That way, if a drive fails or gets infected, I can restore it and get back up quickly. It should work no matter the drive size—whether I’m backing up a 500GB SSD or a larger one. Having multiple 3TB drives would be handy too; I wouldn’t want to buy another large drive just for recovery purposes. It shouldn’t matter if the drive is an SSD or HDD, and I’d also like the ability to boot from another drive in case of failure. I heard some backup programs don’t always handle video backups well, so I’m looking for something reliable. AOMEI worked fine for backups, but when I tried recovering my 500GB SSD backup on a 1TB HDD, everything functioned perfectly except for booting from the drive. If my SSD fails unexpectedly during the night and I have important work, I’d hate to be stuck without access. Ideally, I could use my laptop to restore the OS on another drive and boot from it, at least temporarily. I’m not sure if I bought this system locally. Thanks!
P
Phantomz_MC
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM #1

Hey everyone, just wrapped up setting up my PC. Everything is installed and current. Now all my programs, games, and stuff are ready to go. Before I begin, I want to create a snapshot of my system so I can revert everything if needed. Ghost didn’t work on this build—it doesn’t detect my drives. Since I’m new to this setup, I’m unsure which tools are best or what the right terms mean. I’d like to regularly make full images of all my drives. That way, if a drive fails or gets infected, I can restore it and get back up quickly. It should work no matter the drive size—whether I’m backing up a 500GB SSD or a larger one. Having multiple 3TB drives would be handy too; I wouldn’t want to buy another large drive just for recovery purposes. It shouldn’t matter if the drive is an SSD or HDD, and I’d also like the ability to boot from another drive in case of failure. I heard some backup programs don’t always handle video backups well, so I’m looking for something reliable. AOMEI worked fine for backups, but when I tried recovering my 500GB SSD backup on a 1TB HDD, everything functioned perfectly except for booting from the drive. If my SSD fails unexpectedly during the night and I have important work, I’d hate to be stuck without access. Ideally, I could use my laptop to restore the OS on another drive and boot from it, at least temporarily. I’m not sure if I bought this system locally. Thanks!

W
WeeZiii
Junior Member
33
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM
#2
You're looking to periodically copy your SSD data to an HDD?
W
WeeZiii
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM #2

You're looking to periodically copy your SSD data to an HDD?

A
amkli
Member
197
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM
#3
well theres this thing, called windows backup, which comes with windows, is free, and does backups...
A
amkli
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM #3

well theres this thing, called windows backup, which comes with windows, is free, and does backups...

P
pixalshooter
Junior Member
4
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM
#4
Utilize the integrated utility.
P
pixalshooter
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM #4

Utilize the integrated utility.

T
Turkir
Member
193
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM
#5
I prefer not to duplicate since I'm using large drives in RAID 0 and don't want to switch to Raid 1 or 10. I need an option that provides a backup image so if my system fails, I can transfer it to another drive or laptop for a quick recovery.
T
Turkir
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM #5

I prefer not to duplicate since I'm using large drives in RAID 0 and don't want to switch to Raid 1 or 10. I need an option that provides a backup image so if my system fails, I can transfer it to another drive or laptop for a quick recovery.

Z
zLeoZiin
Senior Member
503
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM
#6
I would create a Windows disk image and handle the rest with CrashPlan
Z
zLeoZiin
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM #6

I would create a Windows disk image and handle the rest with CrashPlan

L
Lama_Rsupilami
Junior Member
35
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM
#7
@Enderman @ Altecice does it generate an image of the drive? When I used Ghost, I had a complete backup of all my drives on another HDD and it took less than 100GB. On Aomi it does the same, but it doesn’t allow me to boot from another HDD after recovery. I prefer Ghost, though since this is my first experience with large HDDs and RAID 0 configurations, it doesn’t recognize them. I might need a workaround that requires using two different backup tools. I’m hoping for a solution in one program. The advantage of Ghost was that I didn’t need the Windows OS to run it—I could boot from the Ghost CD, which already had the OS and software installed. As long as the drive is functional and has my backup image, I could recover it even if my C drive failed.
L
Lama_Rsupilami
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM #7

@Enderman @ Altecice does it generate an image of the drive? When I used Ghost, I had a complete backup of all my drives on another HDD and it took less than 100GB. On Aomi it does the same, but it doesn’t allow me to boot from another HDD after recovery. I prefer Ghost, though since this is my first experience with large HDDs and RAID 0 configurations, it doesn’t recognize them. I might need a workaround that requires using two different backup tools. I’m hoping for a solution in one program. The advantage of Ghost was that I didn’t need the Windows OS to run it—I could boot from the Ghost CD, which already had the OS and software installed. As long as the drive is functional and has my backup image, I could recover it even if my C drive failed.

J
julian_PVP
Senior Member
465
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM
#8
What does a crashplan mean? It's something I've only just learned about.
J
julian_PVP
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM #8

What does a crashplan mean? It's something I've only just learned about.

B
BlueBird12345
Junior Member
5
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM
#9
Yes, you can save all your video media, pictures, and music by converting them into an image format for backup.
B
BlueBird12345
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM #9

Yes, you can save all your video media, pictures, and music by converting them into an image format for backup.

L
LuksFX
Member
108
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM
#10
Yes, it is possible and you have control over selecting specific folders for backup, deciding the storage location, and determining the retention period before deletion.
L
LuksFX
01-31-2024, 03:13 AM #10

Yes, it is possible and you have control over selecting specific folders for backup, deciding the storage location, and determining the retention period before deletion.

Pages (2): 1 2 Next