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| Originally Posted by Navarre Anyway. Thanks in advance for any assistance you can give me. |
Everything you said can be made to work if you want to roll a backup solution yourself and spend alot of time, but...
The best solution I've found for bare metal recovery is
Acronis TrueImage (no I don't work for them). The Linux based software creates an image of your entire drive(s) that can be stored on a USB drive, sent across a network connection to another computer, or burned to CD/DVDs. The software runs in Windows as well as off an OS-agnostic bootable CD it creates or a USB flash drive - very versatile.
I use this software (TrueImage Echo Workstation) daily for backing up client machines before working on them. You pop in the CD, hookup a network connection, and you're backing up in 2 minutes. As simple as it gets.
The software is fast too, and the image files it creates can even be mounted and explored at the file level in Windows if you need to restore just one file.
To restore when your hard drive dies, you stick any working drive in of sufficient capacity - whether's its blank or not doesn't matter, insert the CD again and restore to the new drive. Certain versions even allow restoration to different hardware.