Old Procedure

When we first started we manually used FDISK, Format, etc to set up the target machine for an image transfer, but now we use a special Drive Setup Disk (photo). Drive Setup removes any partition setting on the hard disk, sets it up as one large partition, and does a track by track scandisk against it. Once Drive Setup completes, the hard disk has one large partition on it, and any bad tracks have been assigned as alternate tracks. The disk is ready for software to be loaded on it.

There are a number of image transfer procedures (like Ghost) that work on the sector level, which we use from the Image Machine if possible, but they have problems when the disk architecture of the source system is unlike the disk architecture of the target system. Our clone procedure therefore uses image files compressed and then expanded by LHA (download) which operates at the file level.

We transfer an operating system image in via several different possible procedures:

Once we have transferred the image file we turn off the target system (to eliminate any viruses which might be in memory (photo)), remove any floppy from Drive A:, remove the master hard drive (if we used the third alternative described above) and set up the target hard drive as the primary master. We then turn the machine on, and let it boot up. If we have installed Win95a or Win95b, the first step is to authorize it to restore the 32 bit file names. Once that finishes the autoexec.bat file is automatically updated, so that the restore is only offerred the first time the system is booted.

The system automatically does an "Add New Hardware" and when it finishes we will see that it will remove some devices which were installed on the "image file" system, and which are found on the target system.

If the system is being installed on a Pentium system it will want to reboot before it finishes finding the second (PCI) bus. It is important to tell it not to reboot at that point, but rather to do another "Add New Hardware" to make sure it finds everything before allowing it to reboot.

Note you will probably see a "Your display driver does not support QuickRes. Don't worry about this. When you finish and reboot, and get the new display driver installed, you can right click on the desktop, select Settings, and select at least 256 colors and you will no longer see the QuickRes error.