![]() Maybe I could recreate those drives from whatever files or scripts I had used to create them in the first place. Occasionally, however, I encountered a USB drive that was not created from an ISO. If something went wrong with a USB drive, in most cases I could easily re-create that USB drive from the downloaded ISO. I used other tools to make backups of my data drives, and I used the ISO downloads (which I used to create most of my bootable USB drives) as backups. Third, AOMEI could make a backup of a drive when it was not running.įor USB drives specifically, I did not have much experience with that third option, nor did I need it. Second, AOMEI could make a backup of a running Windows drive, regardless of whether the Windows installations was on a hard or solid state drive or on a Windows To Go USB drive. ![]() First, at least in its Pro version, it could make a direct clone: copy one USB drive to another. AOMEI could back up a USB drive in several different ways. No doubt other backup tools would work too. To back up some USB drives, I was using AOMEI Backupper Standard (free). If you’re one of those readers who wants to know right away how the story ends, see the Conclusion (below). ![]() Now I wanted to update and streamline what I had learned there (and also touched upon in a slightly later post). Four years earlier, I had written a post exploring the question of how to save a backup of a bootable USB drive in Windows 10. ![]()
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