I got my family a "fleet" of 5 cheap off lease computers
to have 2 or 3 to use and two spares ready to go or
to donate parts.. All identical Dell GX-280 Small
Desktop (SDT)'s with Win XP Pro, identical model main
boards, 3.4 GHz P4 processors and 3 Gig RAM.
(About $120 each, "off lease" on eBay)
We actually got by with 40 Gig Hard Disk Drives fairly well.
Our collections of photos, MP3's and downloaded
YouTube videos (FLV480 or MP4) for a video jukebox
playlist have pushed us toward larger drives.
I like the idea of keeping the drives on each system down
in size and just having a large external drive to archive
files and back up twice to prevent loss. Will do this.
However, larger INTERNAL drives in some systems are
necessary for the video jukebox and MP3's to be readily used.
The need / want to occasionally set up fresh
"clean boot" Windows systems easier pushed me to
want the data folders out of the root directory
on the same partition as the Windows system itself.
So I came up with this simple plan for larger drives:
I built a "clean boot" PROTOTYPE drive and added all
of the UPDATES, programs and tweaks that we use
on an everyday system.
Partition and Format with Dell Restore CD Windows XP Pro SP2
Wow! only 3.16 GB used for that!
Copied and installed Dell model specific drivers from their web site
from USB Flash drive. Sound, LAN, System SW, Intel Chipset SW
Copied fast shutdown shortcut from Flash drive.
Installed MS Windows update apparatus and SP3 66.9MB took 27 minutes
REBOOT
MS Update site suggests 105 updates (as of early Dec 2011)
( Internet Explorer 8 is in there somewhere )
added two optional updates:
Dell Video Intel 82915G/GV/910GL Express Chipset and
MS Security Essentials (Update estimates an hour to install)
REBOOT
Still only 6.79 GB used!
Tweaked screen saver, power settings
MS Update site suggests Framework 4 all by itself
REBOOT
MS Update site suggests 20 updates.
I rejected/disabled update for MS LIVE but said YES to optional
Silverlight
12 Minute estimate to download and install TOOK more than AN HOUR!
REBOOT
System tried login password stuff we dummy up for quick boot.
MS Update site has 187.8 MB 27 files estimated 13 minutes, actual 38
minutes
REBOOT
MS Update site says (0) urgent and (0) optional
Went to Adobe and got Flash Player and Shockwave Player
9.57 GB total hard disk space used so far.
Installed VLC Video Player, Quicktime, Adobe Acrobat,etc.
10.6 GB used on drive after a few more tweaks and updates.
I settled on 20 Gigs partition size to allow room for:
1. plenty of room for more MS Updates
2. installed software used on system
3. >10% extra space to allow DEFRAG to work.
I got some 160 Gig Hard Disks Partitioned 20 Gig
up front for Windows system and 20 Gig at the tail
end for a CLONED Windows system as a backup.
These systems only have one SATA port but
I adapted the IDE port used for DVDROM drive
to connect up to my prototype Windows drive.
I used one of those IDE/SATA adapters sold
from China or Hong Kong through eBay.
XXCLONE took about an hour to copy the
image from my prototype drive to the front
partition on a 160 GB Hard Drive.
I took out the prototype drive and adapter
and put the IDE cable back on the DVDROM drive.
I should mention that the REASON I settled on
XXClone Free for this was that many Drive Imagers
copy WHOLE DRIVES and not PARTITIONS.
I had used the Acronis True Image SW free
for use associated with WD branded drives
(from Seagate/Maxtor for their branded drives)
but at least the Freebie does whole drives, not
partitions as I need for my plan.
160 GB 152578 ENTIRE DRIVE
--------------------------
20 GB 20481 C WinXP
50 GB 51199 E Misc
60 GB 60416 F Photos-MP3s-Vids
20 GB 20481 G Clone-of WinXP
The idea was to have an identical copy
of the system drive stashed on the top end.
Several computer makers like Compaq
used to do something like this secretly
with a hidden partition, but I'm setting it
up to be plainly visible and available for
me to update and USE with XXClone.
I Cloned the boot partition to the top
partition using XXClone.
Tempted by the "Cool Tools" tab in XXClone
I told it to "Make Bootable" the top partition.
Now I have a multi boot system where
Cool tools "Make Bootable" decides which
of the two paritions boots and therefore
becomes drive C:
It occurred to me that most clone programs
allow you to clone FROM the boot drive
but not to clone TO the current boot drive.
(Would obviously interrupt a running instance
of Windows using swap files.)
This ability to boot from the top partition
would be very handy for cloning from the
top partition back down to the first partition.
The multiboot scripting in BOOT.INI is
interesting, apparently invoking some
type of boot manager in XXClone.
It's a bit quirky in that it appears to refer
to the FRONT partition as a Clone when
the front parition is actually now the original.
I marked the original vs clone systems
by simply turning off auto arrange of icons
and moving an icon as a marker.
If that icon appear on the left vs the right
I know which image actually booted.
It seems like XXClone somehow triggered
Windows to turn on the Language ? button
on the task bar, but it's not really a problem.
The XXClone help file CHM is at
http://www.xxclone.com/xcln_chm.zip
Pixelab's XXClone FREEWARE Version is at:
http://www.xxclone.com/xxclone.zip
The Pro version for pay does incremental backups at:
http://www.xxclone.com/idwnload.htm
It so happens that I had a SATA drive where it
apparently failed from one head/platter on,
effectively making what was an 80 Gig drive
into a drive with a reliable front partition of 16GB.
It worked just fine for my prototype system and
would work as a backup plan B to clone from
the top partition of a large drive to the front partition
of a large drive should I need a clean boot again.
ie The larger DATA partitions would not normally
need to be duplicated to get a clean boot.
None of this completely eliminates the need for
complete backups or of the large external USB
hard disk to back up the DATA partitions.
The incremental version of XXClone would probably
work well for incremental backups in between
complete image clones of the DATA drives to
such a USB portable archive drive.
"Slotting in" Cloned Windows drives works
especially well for me because the fleet of
off lease computers are all big name OEM
and all identical. The OEM version of Win
XP Pro does NOT object to swapping the
Windows System drive from one computer
to another because they are the identical
model with identical main board from a
big name OEM.
If you have 5 different models, 5 different
mainboards or 5 different configurations then
you would need to make 5 different prototype
windows drives to "slot in" a clean boot
partition this way.
The particular main board I settled on for
my "fleet" is 0G8310 which has a second
SATA port in hardware and in BIOS but the
2nd SATA port just has the connector
on the main board missing. If I get a more
precision soldering iron I might populate that
with a connector. If I add in a SATA card
it might change the mother board profile or
driver situation enough to cause me trouble.
I also want to add a piggy backed
2nd power supply just to run drives on one
machine to facilitate cloning for my little "fleet".
I envision a standard PS piggy backed
off to the left with two caseless drive bays
and two SATA cables, so the rest of the
system does not have to be disturbed much
except for preventive maintenance vacuuming
every 6 months.
I'm already keeping my eyes open for the
next fleet of cheap "off lease" computers to
do all of this with in a few years, if possible.
Has Microsoft created some fresh new hell with
Windows 7 or Windows 8 like registering
software or getting prickly about swapping OEM
hardware around in a fleet situation like this?
Thank you Pixielab for XXClone Freeware!
My little home "fleet" of cheap old "off lease"
computers is looking well set for a few more years!
Greg Hanson, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, USA