Sorry to get back to you late, been a little busy.
Look at the last post, the RHS is empty -> No boot device.
That left 2 possibilities:
1 - The UEFI firmware is corrupted. In this case you may have to reset your BIOS to default settings. Find out from your User Manual on how to do it. I don't...
Not sure I understand your question. If you ask about the HD from my screenshot ? My PC is setup differently and indeed it is from a HD, not from a USB. As you can see, I have multiple bootable devices in my PC ie. Linux, Windows 10 & 11 Installation, Macrium and DisKGenius, All partitioned in a...
Here's the screen shot. When you hi-lite a bootable device on the left, The box on the right change to indicate which HD, the partition # and what file it will boot it from.
In my case, For Macrium, It is H: Drive, Disk 3, Partition #4 and the boot file is BOOTX64.EFI
I am sorry. That what my screen looks. Yours is different, On diskgenius main screen E: drive is your Macrium Boot disk, yes ?
Hi-lite on Boot 0002:UEFI:Removable Device. What do you see on the RHS screen ? The Boot file: \EFI\BOOT\BOOTX64.EFI
If it is then try to boot from it.
BTW, did you try...
Macrium Rescue disk only require about 800+ MB to build.
- From your system spec, You use Bitfender and VPN. Temporary turn those off, rebuild the rescue disk to see if it helps.
- You can also try by adding Windows Macrium Rescue as dual boot with Windows to see if it would boot into Macrium...
Yep, that's what it is. Apparently He installed Windows with either D or E set to "Active". The same happens if one install Windows in UEFI mode, if there's exist an EFI System partition, that's where the installer will use to store the boot info and set up dual boot so it's not random .
Even...
1 - When you open cmd from file explorer, the default working directory: C:\Windows\system32
2 - When you open from right click on start menu, the default working directory: C:\users\yourUserName
3 - When you open Terminal from right click context menu, the default working directory is where you...
@john1955
FYI,
EFI partition is not empty and if you delete this partition, Windows will not boot.
Windows installer created this partition and set its attributes so the content of this partition is hidden so a normal user won't be able to mess with it. That's why when you right click on this...
Both are Crucial T500. I would love to have T700 but they are so expensive.
took 23 seconds, full backup:
Will give more options to clean up, when run, put a tick mark on which one to clean. I normally tick them all
If you look at my screenshot in post #42, My windows C drive is only 150GB and if I backup my Windows with Macrium, it only take less than 30 seconds to backup+Validation. I suggest you move your Data from C drive to T: drive to free up storage in C drive to fit in one of the other internal...
Yep, looks good.
One option is to clone disk 1 to another disk then boot from it. If everything is OK, then clone it back to disk 1.Your C drive is about 700GB, so the only disk that has emough space is 5TB disk (T: drive), is it internal or external ?
Another option is to backup C drive...
Did you actually type exactly the commands listed above ? If you did then I cannot see how that works.
You select partition 4 -> det par then set id="de94bba4-06d1-4d40-a16a-bfd50179d6ac"
without creating a Recovery partition.
So what partition did you set id for ???
Hi, Sorry I went out for dinner, just came back....
Looking at the the Macrium Image above. The partition layout is a mess, you still don't have a Recovery partition.
Partition 4 is unformatted. The reason you think it works because when run: Reagentc /enable, Reagentc cannot find the Recovery...