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| Posted by | Wendy Collins |
| Posted on | 29/06/08 15:13 |
Backing up and Restore
Backup:
We will now take a brief look at the backup and restore features of Nero BackitUp Essentials 2 and the Verbatim 47510.

Using Nero BackitUp Essentials 2, it is possible to backup a complete hard drive or partition by simply selecting the hard drive or partition, as seen in the screenshot above.

Using the files and folders backup feature, it is possible to backup complete folders or single files.

In the above screenshot, we can see that we selected to backup a complete folder from Drive G: on our review PC.

In the above screenshot, we can see the backup has completed and the backup archive has been verified. The total time taken to make the backup and then verify the backed up files was 1 hour 2 minutes and 20 seconds. We can also see the backed up files was 22.14GB in size.
Restore:
Now let’s restore our files. For this test we used another hard drive on our review PC to restore to (drive E: on our review PC).

Choosing the restore path is a simple matter of browsing and then selecting the restore path.

In the above screenshot we can see the restore in progress. Restoring was much faster than the backup process and completed in just less than 18 minutes.
Summary:
The backup and restore process was pretty uneventful and, that is exactly how it should be. Nero BackitUp Essentials 2 and the Verbatim 47510 performed flawlessly and had no problems in backing up or file set and then restoring it.
This concludes our Verbatim 47510 review. Click the link below to read the conclusion...

They may work great in the beginning, but a few weeks/months down the road and they fry.
What makes this one any different?
I've seen posts saying the best bet is to separately buy an internal hard drive and an external case with fan and then to just put the internal drive into the case yourself.
I'm a novice when it comes to hardware, so I don't know - is putting an internal drive into an external case yourself a simple plug in type of thing or is it more complex?
Any help is appreciated!








The drive that i found in my enclosure is a Western Digital Caviar 500GB HDD. Why they called it Caviar i'm not sure but I have several Western Digital HDD's and none have given me problems. One of them is a 5 year old 80GB IDE HDD and they run like dreams. There is one question though. Why when i put the 500GB in the pc my HDD monitoring apps pick up its temperature but, when i put it in an enclosure the apps dont? Does the S.M.A.R.T work externally or only internally


Also i think S.M.A.R.T only works on the native drive interface (in this case SATA) and the drive is connected via USB.

Writing tests
Conclusion
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