1/14/2024 0 Comments Winclone for windSubsequently tried Legacy boot after disabling MacOs System Integrity Protection as per instructions - appeared to not work as well. Problem now is only when switching from MacOs to Windows. All other changes working correctly (from shut down state to booting into Windows or Mac works, shutting down MacOs or Windows works ok, switching from Windows to MacOs works ok). This results in Windows starting to boot up (4 blue windows and rotating white dots on screen) and then stops and MacOs boots up instead. Windows boots up and all looking OK apart from when attempting to switch between MacOs & Windows after selecting restart in MacOs and holding option key down till options appear. That though does not recover my original Windows set up. Update when I had both the Recovery Disc in and the WinInstall USB in I was able to start Windows Set Up in EFI. I have more boot options when I plug either of those in, but Windows still does not boot whichever option I choose. I also have a WinInstall USB created using Bootcamp. I assume something to do with boot up is missing from somewhere? I have a Windows Recovery Disc which I made when I created the Winclone image. I can see all the Windows folders in Bootcamp. I just copied what I saw on your video without really understanding what was happening. I am fairly certain I did not select any checkbox to make anything bootable when I created the Winclone image. I read on the twocanoes knowledge base that “Starting with Winclone 7, the options to shrink or expand a Boot Camp partition only appear when block-based imaging has been selected” Could this be why I don’t have this option? The “Expand NTFS Filesystem” option is not available in my Winclone 9 Tools menu. My computer is a pre T2, MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Late 2013), 1TB SSD, 2.8 GHz Dual-Core Intel Core i7, 16 GB 1600 MHz DDR3, Intel Iris 1536 MB. I am running the latest version of the latest macOS (macOS Big Sur version 11.1) and Windows 10 on a small 75Gb Bootcamp partition. I may have to resort to that if I cannot get Winclone to work. I had also created an image using Windows 10. It looked so easy on the official Winclone 9 video. Tried injecting drivers using Winclone 9 by selecting WinPEDriver. Still unable to boot Windows via Bootcamp. Carried out another restore operation using Winclone 9. Erased Bootcamp partition using the Apple MacBook Disk Utility and then used Bootcamp to restore to one complete partition - then used it to create a 75Gb Bootcamp NTFS partition (same size as original Windows partition). Tried restore of Bootcamp partition using Winclone 9. Failed to boot Windows in Bootcamp after receiving computer back, though booting in Apple mode without issue. Created a Winclone Image on the desktop and carried out a Time Machine backup prior to taking my Macbook Pro into an Apple Store for maintenance (new battery). Do it all from the boot drive: You don't need to boot from a Firewire drive to clone the Windows partition.I recently purchased Winclone 9. Create a Bootcamp partition from within Winclone.Fast: Restore a 10 GB image in less than 10 minutes.Built on the open source ntfstools, which are included in Winclone, so you don't have to install anything else.Verbose logging so you know what is going on.Creates image documents that can be stored on any media and double-clicked to open in WinClone.Clone to your Bootcamp partition either on a separate drive or on the same that contains your Mac OS X partition.Clone Windows XP or Windows Vista with ease.Simply create an image as your would for a backup, and Winclone will create the Windows partition and restore the OS and data onto the new partition.ĭeploy images with ARD: Using the included script and the image created with Winclone, you can easily send a new winclone image to a group of Intel Macs, imaging the entire lab in minutes. If you are in charge of setting up a bunch of machines with both Mac OS X and Bootcamp, Winclone will make your job a breeze.
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