F5F Stay Refreshed Software General Software What software solutions exist for converting internal SSDs to external SSDs?

What software solutions exist for converting internal SSDs to external SSDs?

What software solutions exist for converting internal SSDs to external SSDs?

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PurePhantom
Junior Member
11
02-06-2026, 04:06 AM
#1
Hi all,
Samsung Data Migration creates a perfect copy of an existing internal drive to another internal drive. However, it doesn't work with an external SSD! This means Windows Boot Manager loads the second internal drive, and all programs and files remain intact.
What tool can help me perform an exact clone of my laptop's internal SSD to an external SSD, allowing Windows Boot Manager to boot from the external one?
P
PurePhantom
02-06-2026, 04:06 AM #1

Hi all,
Samsung Data Migration creates a perfect copy of an existing internal drive to another internal drive. However, it doesn't work with an external SSD! This means Windows Boot Manager loads the second internal drive, and all programs and files remain intact.
What tool can help me perform an exact clone of my laptop's internal SSD to an external SSD, allowing Windows Boot Manager to boot from the external one?

Y
ybemy
Member
227
02-06-2026, 07:59 AM
#2
Well, some of us have other interests beyond games and YouTube videos, and apps not found at ninite. We use CAD, video, photo tools, plug-ins, multiple VM setups, various system configurations, connections between different devices, and old personal files from the past. Performing full drive backups takes exactly zero seconds of my time. That’s what automation is about. The systems and Macrium know when and where to act. All you have to do is hand over. And complete backups mean I never miss anything. "Oops, I forgot that folder..." But...no matter the method...just do it. Whatever suits you. My process works for me.
Y
ybemy
02-06-2026, 07:59 AM #2

Well, some of us have other interests beyond games and YouTube videos, and apps not found at ninite. We use CAD, video, photo tools, plug-ins, multiple VM setups, various system configurations, connections between different devices, and old personal files from the past. Performing full drive backups takes exactly zero seconds of my time. That’s what automation is about. The systems and Macrium know when and where to act. All you have to do is hand over. And complete backups mean I never miss anything. "Oops, I forgot that folder..." But...no matter the method...just do it. Whatever suits you. My process works for me.

Y
ylyes4
Senior Member
572
02-07-2026, 02:50 AM
#3
Starting from an external drive isn't an easy task, regardless of the cloning method you attempt. What's your reason for wanting to proceed?
Y
ylyes4
02-07-2026, 02:50 AM #3

Starting from an external drive isn't an easy task, regardless of the cloning method you attempt. What's your reason for wanting to proceed?

W
Wysydia
Junior Member
3
02-09-2026, 01:09 AM
#4
Unless your external SSD uses the same SATA controller, an exact copy won’t function properly since it assumes a specific controller instead of a USB or another type.
Make a bootable version of your operating system on a USB drive—search for "Windows to go" on Google or YouTube.
If you only need a backup, use a cloning tool that provides a bootable ISO or USB image for download and create an image of your drive on the same medium.
W
Wysydia
02-09-2026, 01:09 AM #4

Unless your external SSD uses the same SATA controller, an exact copy won’t function properly since it assumes a specific controller instead of a USB or another type.
Make a bootable version of your operating system on a USB drive—search for "Windows to go" on Google or YouTube.
If you only need a backup, use a cloning tool that provides a bootable ISO or USB image for download and create an image of your drive on the same medium.

F
Frawky
Junior Member
33
02-15-2026, 01:19 AM
#5
Just a simple (failover) backup would work. If the internal SSD fails, I can boot from the external one and everything should be restored! Then I can copy it back in again and resume normal operations.
What software handles this well? That’s what I’m looking for—I’ve never done anything like this before!
I’ve made bootable pen drives using tools like Rufus.
F
Frawky
02-15-2026, 01:19 AM #5

Just a simple (failover) backup would work. If the internal SSD fails, I can boot from the external one and everything should be restored! Then I can copy it back in again and resume normal operations.
What software handles this well? That’s what I’m looking for—I’ve never done anything like this before!
I’ve made bootable pen drives using tools like Rufus.

L
217
02-18-2026, 10:37 PM
#6
For THAT, no problem. Macrium Reflect does exactly this. I use it daily, it is the basis for my entire backup routine. My main system does an Incremental image every night, each physical drive individually. Other systems in the house on different schedules. They write to my big NAS box, but that could just as easily be to an external drive or two. Any questions, just ask. And yes, I've had to use this to recover after a dead drive. What is your backup situation at home? What is your backup situation at home? And if you don't do that, why not? Every single day, I read multiple threads here of "How do I get my stuff back?" or "That drive had 5 years of photos of my kids!!" Be it a dead drive, dropped phone, virus, accidental deletion, formatting the wrong... forums.
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lol_Angela_lol
02-18-2026, 10:37 PM #6

For THAT, no problem. Macrium Reflect does exactly this. I use it daily, it is the basis for my entire backup routine. My main system does an Incremental image every night, each physical drive individually. Other systems in the house on different schedules. They write to my big NAS box, but that could just as easily be to an external drive or two. Any questions, just ask. And yes, I've had to use this to recover after a dead drive. What is your backup situation at home? What is your backup situation at home? And if you don't do that, why not? Every single day, I read multiple threads here of "How do I get my stuff back?" or "That drive had 5 years of photos of my kids!!" Be it a dead drive, dropped phone, virus, accidental deletion, formatting the wrong... forums.

M
MoodyCamel
Member
237
02-19-2026, 12:38 AM
#7
Macrium Reflect fits perfectly for me!
Finding this solution was tough since everyone was confusing things...
I require a bootable exact replica of my full OS along with all programs and files on my external SSD.
Excited to begin using the tool.
Appreciate your input!
M
MoodyCamel
02-19-2026, 12:38 AM #7

Macrium Reflect fits perfectly for me!
Finding this solution was tough since everyone was confusing things...
I require a bootable exact replica of my full OS along with all programs and files on my external SSD.
Excited to begin using the tool.
Appreciate your input!

I
IBAG2006
Junior Member
4
02-20-2026, 01:34 PM
#8
The image isn't directly usable for booting. Instead, it's meant to be applied to a drive, either as a replacement or to upgrade it.
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IBAG2006
02-20-2026, 01:34 PM #8

The image isn't directly usable for booting. Instead, it's meant to be applied to a drive, either as a replacement or to upgrade it.

A
Arkidala
Junior Member
43
02-20-2026, 11:47 PM
#9
I think Macrium Reflect could recover an image from the USB drive, making it bootable. It would be worth checking if Windows functions properly in those scenarios. Someone else noted the operating system likely needs a SATA or NVMe controller rather than a USB one. That detail might still be important... I might give it a try.
A
Arkidala
02-20-2026, 11:47 PM #9

I think Macrium Reflect could recover an image from the USB drive, making it bootable. It would be worth checking if Windows functions properly in those scenarios. Someone else noted the operating system likely needs a SATA or NVMe controller rather than a USB one. That detail might still be important... I might give it a try.

D
DriveIn
Senior Member
739
02-21-2026, 06:32 AM
#10
When you create a clone of a hard drive, you can start your computer from the cloned disk while keeping the system state intact. However, Windows does not allow booting from a USB-connected drive, which is a built-in limitation. You can perform the clone on a hard drive inside your computer or on a USB drive placed in a caddy. If you attempt to boot the clone from an external USB drive, you'll need to detach it from the caddy and connect it directly to the motherboard's SATA port.
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DriveIn
02-21-2026, 06:32 AM #10

When you create a clone of a hard drive, you can start your computer from the cloned disk while keeping the system state intact. However, Windows does not allow booting from a USB-connected drive, which is a built-in limitation. You can perform the clone on a hard drive inside your computer or on a USB drive placed in a caddy. If you attempt to boot the clone from an external USB drive, you'll need to detach it from the caddy and connect it directly to the motherboard's SATA port.

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