You have the wrong backup strategy. Keep the C: drive lean for Windows and key installtions etc. I can recover that in well under 10 minutes, much quicker than faffing about with System Restore which I found unreliable.Here we go again... Yes, I know a full backup is the best practice, but if it takes too long to complete I would rather postpone it and have System Restore enabled to save my @$$ as it happened multiple times since Windows XP. I don't trust incremental backups, I prefer a full backup or clone to a spare disk and as I have 1TB disk over 70% full, it takes over 2 hours. I don't want to do that often. If you want to backup every couple of days or risk having your computer unusable, it is your choice. I would rather use System Restore to undo the annoying bugs of some Windows updates and restore from a full disk backup only when disaster strikes, hopefully never. Just because System Restore is not always fixing the issue, it doesn't mean it is totally useless.
My Computer
System One
-
- OS
- Windows 11 Pro
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- Self build
- CPU
- Core i7-13700K
- Motherboard
- Asus TUF Gaming Plus WiFi Z790
- Memory
- 64 GB Kingston Fury Beast DDR5
- Graphics Card(s)
- Gigabyte GeForce RTX 2060 Super Gaming OC 8G
- Sound Card
- Realtek S1200A
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Viewsonic VP2770 & Dell (secondary)
- Screen Resolution
- 2560 x 1440
- Hard Drives
- Kingston KC3000 2TB NVME SSD & SATA HDDs & SSD
- PSU
- EVGA SuperNova G2 850W
- Case
- Nanoxia Deep Silence 1
- Cooling
- Noctua NH-D14
- Keyboard
- Microsoft Digital Media Pro
- Mouse
- Logitech Wireless
- Internet Speed
- 80 Mb / s
- Browser
- Chrome
- Antivirus
- Defender, Malwarebytes Free & AdwCleaner





