Personally, I use the MVP Custom PE Builder tool (link in my signature) and add any extra device drivers needed for my computers using the same, then the media built works on almost all of my computers. The only reason why you might need more than one rescue media build would be if there were different device driver requirements in play. Provided that all your ATI backup images have clearly identifiable unique names, then there should be no issue with knowing which is for what computer system. I would recommend keeping your ATI backup images in separate folders, one per different computer being backed up, so as to make life easier for recognising what images belong to which systems etc. You could but it is not recommended, especially if the folders hold Windows system images created by the Windows Backup tool, not by ATI. See KB 61632: Acronis True Image 2019: how to create bootable mediaĪlso KB 61621: Acronis True Image 2019: How to restore your computer with WinPE-based or WinRE-based mediaĬan I place ATI2019 OS images in the same folders as the Windows images? KB 59877: Acronis True Image: how to distinguish between UEFI and Legacy BIOS boot modes of Acronis Bootable Media This is to avoid migrating between MBR and GPT partition schemes. Such rescue media will work with most recent versions of Windows OS, the key caveat being to boot from it using the same BIOS mode as the OS uses to boot. If your 9 GB FAT32 partition is empty and has a Windows drive letter allocated, then you can use the normal Acronis Rescue Media Builder tool to create rescue media in that partition so that you can boot from the external USB HDD drive. Is there a way to build a recovery app in the FAT32 partition which can auto-boot on any PC and selectively restore the ATI images?
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