Maybe booting up a linux cdrom live OS and copying the cloned drive from
USB/Firefire to the internal drive. The internal drive should already be
bootable and have the right volume number.
----- Original Message -----From: Dan AndersonSent: Monday, November 23, 2009 8:56 AMSubject: [xxclone] re: Can't boot FIreWire drive. Now what?Hi Jon,Reading between the lines, the situation seems to be one where the current hard drive on your laptop is toast, and you are trying to use a cloned version that you created earlier, but you perhaps had not previously tested to see if it could boot up on its own (otherwise you should have encountered the current problem earlier) ... or maybe you are now doing the testing and your current hard drive is still okay (hopefully that is the case)?Pending comments from others, my understanding is that the hard drive to which you are cloning needs to be one that you can physically swap with your source hard drive in case you need to replace your current hard drive, and both your testing and use of such a clone drive on a stand-alone basis would of necessity involve a physical swap.If you can carry out the physical swap but have problems getting the clone drive to boot, the solution may involve using some other bootable CD or DVD to access your C drive to edit the boot.ini file.(With regards to your question of a CD or DVD image of your hard drive, my understanding is that xxclone does not work that way; there is other software that uses an imaging approach ... although such an approach has its own risks and limitations.)Please clarify if the above does not correctly interpret your circumstances, and whether you can make a physical swap of the drives. Others might identify some other considerations.Dan (just an xxclone user)
----- Original Message -----From: Jon KSent: Sunday, November 22, 2009 5:05 PMSubject: [xxclone] Can't boot FIreWire drive. Now what?
>The Clone is intended to Physically (Electrically in the case of dual
>internal drives) replace the Original. To be usable the "Cloned to"
>Drive must then obviously be the same type (physical size & connection
>type) as the original. This is something not stated anywhere, but
>should be understood?
Not true.
>
>
>
>On Nov 23, 10:55 pm, foxidrive <foxidri...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> On Mon, 23 Nov 2009 15:03:30 -0800 (PST), DES <des...@Cox.net> wrote:
>> >The Clone is intended to Physically (Electrically in the case of dual
>> >internal drives) replace the Original. To be usable the "Cloned to"
>> >Drive must then obviously be the same type (physical size & connection
>> >type) as the original. This is something not stated anywhere, but
>> >should be understood?
>>
>> Not true.
>
>And what exactly isn't true
The two drives don't have to be the same type, size or connection.
----- Original Message -----From: DESSent: Tuesday, November 24, 2009 12:42 PMSubject: [xxclone] Re: Can't boot FIreWire drive. Now what?
----- Original Message -----From: Dan FitzgeraldSent: Tuesday, November 24, 2009 9:34 AMSubject: [xxclone] Re: Can't boot FIreWire drive. Now what?
I concur. I have used a SATA drive as a clone for an IDE and it worked just fine.