![]() ![]() ![]() For a 500GB drive it took about 2 hours 10 min from start (once I got things working) to finish. The Acronis displayed “Time left” was not accurate at all for me. After saving and exiting BIOS settings my laptop booted into the Acronis clone operation. In BIOS boot tab all I did was disable Fast Boot, as Acronis was already #1 in boot order. After restart BIOS settings are displayed. After boot select Troubleshoot, Advanced Options, UEFI Firmware Settings, Restart. For Windows 10 you have to go into Start-Settings-Update & Security, Recovery (left pane), Advanced Startup-Restart Now. After manually restarting I had to go through Acronis setup again and then got the pop-up message and was able to click restart from there.Īcronis did NOT automatically start after reboot. I got a message in notification panel/taskbar that Acronis was paused and to restart, and did so, but no “pop up”. Other problems I had with Windows 10 Home 18363.657 -ĭid not get “Restart” prompt after going through Acronis setup the first time. It also has the gotcha that its backup uses Windows, so works with any disk, while its recovery boot media uses its own drivers which may not support the hardware (this catastrophe happened to me). Acronis then recognized the drive as WD/Sandisk and proceeded. Acronis is well-known for lagging behind on support for newer disk models. I opened Device Manager, expanded Disk Drives, found the Sandisk SSD and double-clicked, went to the “Volume” tab, selected “Populate” at the bottom. I ran into the same problem of Acronis not recognizing the new USB-attached (USB-to-SATA adapter) SSD as WD/Sandisk, although mine is a SSD Plus, not Ultra. ![]()
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