What is special about a Boot Camp partition?

I have a somewhat complicated partition setup. Boot Camp Assistant, naturally, refuses to add a partition. I intend to eventually boot Windows directly and use Parallels to virtualize, but as far as I can tell Parallels insists on having a genuine Boot Camp partition to virtualize.
How can I emulate what Boot Camp does to a partition to trick everyone into thinking the partition was created with Boot Camp?

Boot Camp Assistant will only create a partition on an OS X drive that only has one partition - Macintosh HD. If you have more than one partition on your hard drive, then Boot Camp will not create another partition.
If you want to create a bootable Windows partition on a drive that has more than one partition already, then you need to use a third-party boot loader such as Boot Runner or The rEFInd Boot Manager. I cannot tell you if these work with Parallels.

Similar Messages

  • Does anyone know what will happen to my boot camp partition once I upgrade to lion?

    I have MacBook Pro (4,1) running leopard 10.6.8 and am hesitant about the upgrade to lion because I have a FAT boot camp partition with window xp in it and a number of apps that I wouldn't like to lose in the process. Does anybody know how the upgrade handles the boot camp partition?

    While this is the way it is supposed to work, because the Lion upgrade does try to create a new Recovery HD partition on the system disk, there is a chance that the BootCamp partition can be corrupted. Unfortunately Apple does not provide a tool or instructions on how to backup the BootCamp partition. I have had good results with WinClone even though the program seems to be no longer supported. I have just restored my XP BootCamp partition after my live partition was apparently corrupted by my Lion install. My recommendation to anyone running a BootCamp partition would be to back it up prior to any upgrade attempt.

  • What will happen with my Boot Camp partition if I'll do a celan install of Mac OS X Lion?

    I'm planing to do a clean install of Lion (form USB drive). Will my Boot Camp partition (where I have Windows 7 installed) stay untouched?

    You can clone the Bootcamp partition from within OS X using the free WinClone.
    http://download.cnet.com/Winclone/3000-2242_4-11089354.html
    You can also clone your Snow Leopard to another drive (needs a whole one to itself/partition) using the free Carbon Copy Cloner.

  • Daily Backup for Boot Camp partition

    I'm looking for a Windows software to perform daily incremental backups from my Boot Camp partition to an external USB drive. It should also be possible to restore the COMPLETE Boot Camp partition from that backup in case of a hard drive failure. (It's NOT necessary that various versions of files are kept around-the-clock like Time Machine does. It's also not necessary that the backup itself is bootable.)
    I've tried Genie TimelIne, but unfortunately it wasn't able to manage a complete restore. The taskbar was missing, no applications were installed (only present), settings were missing after the restore..., so I had to manually install nearly everything.
    I've heard "Macrium Reflect" should be better. Is this true or does anyone have another good tip?
    BTW I'm not looking for a solution to backup from the Boot Camp partition to the OS X partition and I don't want to create a complete clone every day.
    Thanks for your help!

    coxorange wrote:
    A bit difficult to test such a software including worst case recovery if you can't dispense with the concerned computer temporarily. And VERY time-consuming!! Hence I asked for personal experiences.
    Well,  Anyone elses personal experience won't mean much to you unless they have the same setup as you, so asking others for personal experience is as much of a crap shoot for you as doing it yourself.  I went through lots of testing several years ago on my first MacBook Pro, but almost none of that testing is valid for my current machine.  With the variations in machines, and machine configurations, what works for someone else might not work for you, and what might work for you might not work for someone else.  I learned this when I was testing Colnexzilla as a possible backup/cloning tool.  It worked fine on my MacBook Pro, but wouldn't work properly for a number of other users.
    coxorange wrote:
    What do you mean I'm confusing?
    I always wrote about the Boot Camp partition.
    I agree that what you are asking for seems rather confusing.  You talk about backing up your data on your Windows partition, and you talk about performing incremental backups.  The WIndows 7 Data backup utility it perfect for tasks like that.  It's when you start wanting to perform disk image backups, and then ontop of that perform incremental image backups of your Windows partition that things get challenging and confusing.  Since you aren't clear about what scheme you want to use, it is hard to answer with a "clear answer" and not get confused by what you seem to be asking.
    coxorange wrote:
    As far as I know that's not enough to perform incremental backups including EVERYTHING on the Boot Camp partition.
    If you use the Windows 7 data backup and perform incremental backups, you will have a backiup of all your data from the Windows partition.  Isn't that want you want?  If you want to perform a restore, it will not restore you back to a bootable drive, but it will have all your data and files backed up.  If you want to perform a partition backup image, and make those backups incremental nightly, it might be possible.  Since you are talking about a Boot Camp partition on a Mac here, you also need to clarify if you want this backup to run when teh system is booted into Windows, or when teh system is runnign MacOS, or ifit is acceptable to boot from yet another media for the backup purposes. 
    At this time, I'm not sure that any software exists which can make backup image of your Boot Camp/Windows partition when runnign MacOS that will make a backup image that cna restore to a bootable volume and can do incremental backups.  There are few, if any backup tools that will run runder native Windows on your Boot Camp partition that will make an image file backup that can do incremental backups, and also allow you to restore to a bootable partition.  I beleive that the Paragon software is one of the very few that can do this.  I have tried and successfully made backupns and restores from backup disk images using custom boot drives for CloneZilla, and the Paragon Drive Backup tool.  I don't believe that CloneZilla will do inremental backups, and I'm not sure about the Paragon software as I stopped using Boot Camp about 1.5 years ago when I upgraded to my current MacBook Pro.  Now with this system, I don't run native Windows, I only run it virtualized using Parallels Desktop and VMWare Fusion.  For both of those, I get a full system backup with each MacOS backup I take, since the Windows File System is virtualized and stored entirely in files on my MacOS partition.

  • Boot Camp partition not showing in startup disk or when holding alt key

    I've read countless discussions about similar questions to this one, however, I still haven't been able to find any solution.
    I have an old 2006 MacBook that has just been fully updated and reformatted. I'm running OSX 10.7.5 and Boot Camp 4.
    I went through the Boot Camp installation from an Windows ISO image in my usb drive, where it succesfully downloaded all files needed, and prompted me to make the partition, after which it restarted and was supposed to take me to the installation manager in the Windows partition. I first got the "No bootable driver" error, to which I read I was supposed to restart the computer, hold the alt key, and choose the boot camp partition. However, it does not show up. I only get Mac and Recover drivers.
    I went into the Mac's startup disk, and only the Mac driver is showing, no Boot Camp driver, however, when I go into Disk Utilities, I can see that the BootCamp driver there.
    I read somewhere that I should zap pram and reset SMC, which I did with their instructions. It didn't change anything, I still only get the Mac driver and Recovery when hitting the alt key.
    Does it have something to do with my MacBook being older? That's the only reason I can think that would not allow me to do this.
    Let me know what other info I can give you so that you can please help me!! Thanks in advance!

    In last resort I solved my missing BOOTCAMP partition problem using a program called: iPartition from coriolis systems located in the United Kingdom http://www.coriolis-systems.com/iPartition.php it took me a coupleof days to figure out the credit card system they have Hint: use your 9 digit zip code to find your credit card address and call your bank if you have an overseas hold on the card!!!! The program found my missing BOOTCAMP partition and restored it. It did take a couple of e-mails to learn to use their program. Let me know how you turn out!

  • How do I back up my Boot Camp partition to external firewire drive?

    I have a 15 GB Windows XP Boot Camp partition (FAT32). I want to back it up to a 120 GB external Firewire drive. (I know the backup won't be bootable). In OX X Disk Utility, I formatted the external drive as MS-DOS (FAT). I planned to do the backup using the Windows Backup utility.
    However, when booted into WinXP, Windows will not recognize the external hard drive. I thought I might need to create a FAT32 partion of 32 GB or less on the external drive, but I apparently can't do this in OS X or Windows (since Windows doesn't recognize the drive).
    Any suggestions on how to backup the Boot Camp partition will be appreciated. I'm mainly interested in preserving all programs and data. Ideally, a clone could be created that could be restored back to the original partition in bootable form, but from studying this and other forums, it dosn't seem to be easy to do this for a FAT32-formatted volume.

    My goal was to create a bootable clone of my FAT32 Boot Camp partition, while at the same time increasing the size of the partition from 15 GB to 32 GB if possible. This is what I did:
    1. As suggested in this thread, I used Disk Utility to create a disk image. I formatted it as MS-DOS (FAT), and made it 32 GB in size.
    2. Used the Finder to copy all files from my 15 GB Windows XP partition to the new disk image.
    The following steps were only to determine if the disk image is a viable backup:
    3. Removed the internal hard drive with my original Win XP partition, and installed a new internal hard drive.
    4. Used Boot Camp Assistant to create a 32 GB Boot Camp partition on the new internal drive.
    5. Inserted my Win XP installation disk and started the Windows installation. Formatted the new partition as FAT32. (I used the long rather than the quick format method--not sure if this was necessary.)
    6. Continued the Windows installation to the point of restarting the computer, at which time I used the Option key to boot back into OS X.
    7. Used the Finder to copy all the files from the 32 GB disk image to the new Boot Camp partition. (This overwrote a few Windows files installed by the aborted Win XP installation.)
    8. Restarted and used the Option key to select the new 32 GB Boot Camp Partition. Windows booted as usual with all files, programs, etc. from the original 15 GB partition. Windows did complain about "new hardware" and required a restart, but all appears normal.
    This indicates that the disk image containing all the files from my original Boot Camp partition is a viable backup, and can be used to restore the partition if necessary. I'm not sure if formatting the disk image as MS-DOS (rather than Mac OS extended) was necessary, or not.

  • BSOD every 20 minutes running windows XP in boot camp partition

    Has anyone else had this problem? Everything was running fine for a couple of months on my new mac OS X until around the time I installed the recommended updater to Boot Camp 2.1, then Windows XP started crashing every 20 minutes exactly, BCCode : 1000007f. One line of discussion suggests it's a boot camp problem but uninstalling the update hasn't helped. Others seemed to think it might be a graphics card incompatibility. I've now been advised that it's a Norton 2008 problem and I should uninstall that although I haven't tried yet. But the every 20 minutes must be some clue to what's going on. Does anyone have any ideas?

    Thanks Axel. I removed Norton 2008 with the uninstall tool and hey presto no more BSODs so far (24 hours). I've also replaced Norton with Kaspersky. I guess this is really a Norton/Boot Camp compatibility problem but it's weird that Norton ran without problems on my system for five months until I installed the Boot Camp 2.1 updater. Having said that, I now see that there are a couple of discussions on this in the Boot Camp > Installation and Storage topic list ...
    In one of these, Mark Davidson3 resolved the problem by completely uninstalling/reinstalling his Boot Camp partition and is now running Norton again with no problem but I wonder if that's because he must have uninstalled/reinstalled Norton in the process. Like me, the crashes had started for him only after he installed the Boot Camp 2.1 updater. Presumably Norton would run again on my system now too if I reinstalled it.
    Has anyone out there talked to the Norton/Boot Camp people about this?

  • Copying a disk which has a boot camp partition

    Colleague has an iMac with a boot camp partition, and the disk has failed.  It won't boot off the mac partition, although the windows partition works fine.  He bought a new 1T disk and we are trying to copy his disk on to it, and will then install the new disk into the iMac.
    So it's booted up using the SnowLeopard install disk and I am running disk utility.  First I tried to partition the disk into something that looks like the partition scheme on the current disk -- big partition for os x, little partition for windows, although big & little are 750GB vs 250GB as opposed to the smaller version on the 260GB original.
    Then I tried to use the Restore to go from the old bootcamp partition to the new MS-DOS (fat) partition on the new drive.  This failed.  First it resized the fat partition down to an ever-so-slightly smaller partition than the NTFS original, and then generated an error because the partition is too small.
    How do we do this?

    Loner T wrote:
    1. Do you have a TM backup of the OSX which came from this "failed" disk? It may just be a matter of reinstalling OSX too work around bacd blocks?
    My boss tried that about a year ago, but it failed again after not too long.
    2. What is the failure when switching to OSX from Windows?
    Not sure.  Now when I option-boot the machine I can't see either partition -- I can see the installer dvd and the new drive in its external enclosure.
    3. Windows can be installed only on the internal disk, which is a Windows restriction that BC enforces. Apple allows OS to installed on external drives. Ask Gates/Ballmer/Nadella why?
    4. Yes, you can get data of the disk, not matter how it is connected, internal or external. It is tricky to take a Volume and move it. Can I suggest an investment in Winclone to backup and restore (http://www.twocanoes.com/products/mac/winclone) Windows?
    5. Yes, but I would recommend putting Bootcamp Windows back as BC/Windows, rather than virtualizing it using Parallels.
    Well moving the new disk in to the iMac is one of the tasks we need to accomplish, so we can do it now.  My plan was to use dd to move the data from the partition on the old drive to the partition on the new drive, once we can get Boot Camp Assistant to create it.  Winclone looks like a great product, but it's $29.  Parallels is only $79, and if a disk fails or you migrate to new hardware all of the Parallels vms come over effortlessly using Setup Assistant or Migration Assistant.

  • Creating and restoring a Boot Camp partition using Paragon

    I am trying to restore a clone of the Boot Camp partition that's on my MacBook Air (Snow Leopard) to My MacBook Pro (Lion).
    I was told I could do this without requiring the Windows 7 installation disk by using Paragon Hard Disk Manager.
    I downloaded the Paragon Hard Disk Manager on the MacBook Air in the Windows partition and followed the steps the Wizard told me. I chose back up. I successfully backed up the Boot Camp partition but noticed that the amount of disk space on the back up external drive was about 8GB, but the amount used up by Boot Camp was 16 GB.
    When I went into the new computer and tried to create a Boot Camp partition, I am not able to do this without installing Windows software.
    When I plugged in the external drive which had the back up on it, it just has some files and no Wizard I can use to restore the Windows partition.
    So I think I've done it wrongly.
    When I first started the wizard, there was a choice of making an image. I did choose this initially and a message came up and said I had done this but there was nothing else - no information about where this image was and what I should do with it. So I chose "Back up" and that is where I am.
    Even if I do manage to create an image that contains everything, the operating system and the files, how can I restore that to the newly created Boot Camp partition on the other computer if in order to create the Boot Camp partition I need to install a Windows 7 disk?
    It's not that I don't have a valid Windows 7 installation disk, I do but I have to call telephone support to install it because the activation is tied to the first laptop which has issues and needs to be repaired and that's why I am doing the migration of the data. And it's inconvenient to do the telephone thing because it's after hours now and I want to get the clone of the Windows partition before I send off the computer for repairs which I am supposed to do tomorrow morning.
    Plus, I am not sure by using the Windows 7 installation disk and migration of data method that I will have the partition looking exactly the same as before, and that's very important for me because I do internet banking with a foreign bank and it took ages for them to set up the internet banking on my computer, and I am worried that internet banking won't work if I do not have an exact clone of the Windows partition.
    I can go back again and try making an image disk but I still have the problem of using the Paragon program which is a Windows program on the Mac operating system, which I have to use when I am creating the Windows partition. Is there other software from Paragon that I am supposed to get?

    Paragon didn't work for me and their support is quite lousy. I think I just threw $50 away.
    I didn't need another activation key to install Windows 7 on the second computer (MBP). The boot camp installation went smoothly. Once in Windows, I downloaded the software again, Paragon Hard Disk Manager, and then chose "restore". It didn't recognize the archive I had made on the external hard drive no matter what I did. I had to give up after a few tries.
    So I went to the Paragon website to look for answers in the support section.
    They do not respond to emailed support questions for up to three days after you send in the question even if you are a new customer.
    I am tempted to ask for a refund because they have false advertising claiming that their product works when it doesn't.
    The steps are not that hard to follow if you use their Wizard and the Wizard told me that I had done everything right and that I had created an archive and I named it and everything.
    When I went to restore it, nothing. I couldn't even eject the volume. Very strange.
    Their FAQ on Support site is unhelpful and full of technical terminology. Nothing pertains to my problem.
    I really don't want the headache. Besides if all I wanted was to do a backup I could have used the free back up and restore utility in Windows 7 which is meant to be excellent.
    Another Apple Support Discussion member  said they had a similar problem, a problem with the archives, and that even after working with Paragon for seven months, it was still not resolved.
    After a certain period of time after you've bought the product, you have to pay $50 to get support. It's not worth the bother.
    It's a German company and German companies in general are not big into service. I can tell that this is true with this company.
    So having been burned, I really do not want to keep going down this path. I really just want my money back.

  • Backup to TImeCapsule including Boot Camp partition

    I used Boot Camp to install Windows 7 Professional on my new MacBook Air, and have now got Parallels Desktop 6 for Mac working OK with a Windows Virtual Machine. But I am reluctant to remove the Boot Camp partition. Now I have got TIme Capsule/Time Machine working OK for automatic backups - but the BootCamp/Windows stuff is not being backed up. Can anyone tell me how to include the Boot Camp partition and all my Windows-based work in the automatic backup 'of the entire machine' (the reason I bought a Time Capsule) to Time Capsule? It seems that only the MAC side of the machine is being backed up hourly by Time Machine. Can't find anything in Knowledge Base or Help about this. Thanks!

    verycactus wrote:
    I want to keep this discussion on MacBook Air not go to BootCamp topic because I need a wireless backup solution.
    I'm suggesting you go there to find an app that will backup your BootCamp partition to a Time Capsule. I don't know if WinClone can do that, or if there are better options.
    If I can partition my Mac using Boot Camp, is it possible to partition the Time Capsule
    No. But you can create a +disk image+ on it, and back up the Windoze side to it, if you can find an app that will work. See the blue box in #Q3 of [Using Time Machine with a Time Capsule|http://web.me.com/pondini/TimeMachine/TimeCapsule.html] (or use the link in *User Tips* at the top of the +Time Capsule+ forum).
    you sold me all the bits, what's the answer please?
    You're not talking to Apple here. We're just ordinary users, like you, volunteering our time, with the rare exception of an Apple employee posting here on his/her own time (and identified by a silver Apple logo), and in the +Discussions Feedback+ forum, where the Hosts (identified by a purple Apple logo) will post about the Discussions themselves, not technical issues.
    Click +Help & Terms of Use+ at the right of this page for details.
    I'd email Support but there's no email Support offered and I can hardly phone USA from Australia trying to get an answer to this.
    Click +Contact Us+ at the bottom of the page to find numbers in Australia.
    Maybe a Genius in my local retail Apple store can help?
    Possible. But they generally don't seem to have much training on Time Machine or Time Capsules.
    Info on the whole question of backup & data protection is fairly thin in the Apple world - or am I looking in tihe wrong place or calling it the wrong thing? thanks
    For information on 3rd-party utilities to use with BootCamp, try the Boot Camp forum. For information on Time Machine, try the +Snow Leopard > Time Machine+ forum. There are several *User Contributed Tips* at the top of that forum. For Time Capsule questions/issues, there's a +Time Capsule+ forum in the +Digital Life+ section.

  • Firewire Target DIsk Mode Mac partition not Boot Camp partition

    Hi I'm having issues starting up my Mac and would like to Firewire mount the drive then image it. However, when I do so the Boot Camp partition mounts instead of the Mac partition. I've tried using Disk Utility on the host machine to mount the Mac partition (it does show up in Disk Utility) without success, Is there anything I can do.
    (Yes I have yesterday's Time Machine backup, but would still prefer to do a full image before wiping and installing the OS).

    Are you talking about starting up one computer in Target Disk Mode and then seeing it with a second computer (and if so, which model computer and which OS)?
    [How to use FireWire target disk mode|http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1661] includes description of hardware and software requirements.
    [What to do if your Mac doesn't enter FireWire Target Disk Mode|http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=75414], also read about [Open Firmware Password Protection|http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/openfirmwarepassword.html] which can disable Target Disk Mode.
    [Technical Note TN 1189|http://developer.apple.com/technotes/tn/tn1189.html#TargetMode] - driver details for TDM

  • Boot Camp partition not bootable after update

    Hi All, hi Loner T!
    After an OSX update I lost my Boot Camp partition. Reading you replies here on the forum, i was able to save my important files through testdisk, for what i'm really thankful! Following your instructions in this thread (Bootcamp disk0s4 gone after Yosemite update) the bootcamp partition finally appeared in finder and disk utility.
    But sudo gdisk /dev/disk0 returns with this:
    Kovacs-Peter-Attilas-MacBook-Pro:~ kovacspeterattila$ Sudo gdisk /dev/disk0
    Password:
    GPT fdisk (gdisk) version 1.0.0
    Warning: Devices opened with shared lock will not have their
    partition table automatically reloaded!
    Partition table scan:
      MBR: protective
      BSD: not present
      APM: not present
      GPT: present
    Found valid GPT with protective MBR; using GPT.
    Command (? for help):
    So if it is able i would avoid reinstalling windows, and all the applications with your help. I saw many people asking you about this case, so i hope you may can help me as well.
    Thank you!

    Hi LonerT, I too have lost the ability to boot into windows/bootcamp - only Mac & recovery are displayed at startup.
    Below are my results for the same set of instructions.
    What does it indicate?
    Thank you!
    Hils-MacBook-Pro-2:~ king_hil$ diskutil list
    /dev/disk0
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *251.0 GB   disk0
       1:                        EFI EFI                     209.7 MB   disk0s1
       2:                  Apple_HFS Macintosh HD            175.0 GB   disk0s2
       3:                 Apple_Boot Recovery HD             650.0 MB   disk0s3
       4:       Microsoft Basic Data                         50.0 GB    disk0s4
    Hils-MacBook-Pro-2:~ king_hil$ diskutil cs list
    No CoreStorage logical volume groups found
    Hils-MacBook-Pro-2:~ king_hil$ sudo gpt -vv -r show /dev/disk0
    gpt show: /dev/disk0: mediasize=251000193024; sectorsize=512; blocks=490234752
    gpt show: /dev/disk0: Suspicious MBR at sector 0
    gpt show: /dev/disk0: Pri GPT at sector 1
    gpt show: /dev/disk0: Sec GPT at sector 490234751
          start       size  index  contents
              0          1         MBR
              1          1         Pri GPT header
              2         32         Pri GPT table
             34          6        
             40     409600      1  GPT part - C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B
         409640  341796872      2  GPT part - 48465300-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
      342206512    1269536      3  GPT part - 426F6F74-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
      343476048   49103024        
      392579072   97654784      4  GPT part - EBD0A0A2-B9E5-4433-87C0-68B6B72699C7
      490233856        863        
      490234719         32         Sec GPT table
      490234751          1         Sec GPT header
    Hils-MacBook-Pro-2:~ king_hil$ sudo fdisk /dev/disk0
    Disk: /dev/disk0 geometry: 30515/255/63 [490234752 sectors]
    Signature: 0xAA55
             Starting       Ending
    #: id  cyl  hd sec -  cyl  hd sec [     start -       size]
    1: EE 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [         1 -     409639] <Unknown ID>
    2: AF 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [    409640 -  341796872] HFS+       
    3: AB 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [ 342206512 -    1269536] Darwin Boot
    4: 0C 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [ 392579072 -   97654784] Win95 FAT32L
    I added:
    Hils-MacBook-Pro-2:~ king_hil$ sudo fdisk /dev/disk0
    Disk: /dev/disk0 geometry: 30515/255/63 [490234752 sectors]
    Signature: 0xAA55
             Starting       Ending
    #: id  cyl  hd sec -  cyl  hd sec [     start -       size]
    1: EE 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [         1 -     409639] <Unknown ID>
    2: AF 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [    409640 -  341796872] HFS+       
    3: AB 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [ 342206512 -    1269536] Darwin Boot
    4: 0C 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [ 392579072 -   97654784] Win95 FAT32L
    Hils-MacBook-Pro-2:~ king_hil$ sudo dd if=/dev/rdisk0s4 count=1 2>/dev/null | hexdump -C
    00000000  be b7 90 5b dc 2d 75 3f  bc f2 56 7b d7 ee 87 19  |...[.-u?..V{....|
    00000010  b9 cd de 96 1f af c7 a9  ef 83 eb 21 fa 90 7e a2  |...........!..~.|
    00000020  31 1a 9c e9 c3 ea c9 78  78 3f 02 1f 31 0f 54 90  |1......xx?..1.T.|
    00000030  26 4d d9 a3 e1 a9 7f f4  f7 0f 65 e6 1e 6b fb c1  |&M........e..k..|
    00000040  a6 13 bf 5e 52 89 ef 07  a5 d8 4b 32 86 93 94 09  |...^R.....K2....|
    00000050  db 49 d6 84 6f 7f 51 54  fc a4 70 22 7b a2 78 a2  |.I..o.QT..p"{.x.|
    00000060  76 52 b3 1f 62 68 62 72  d2 b6 17 7e be 8b d7 ff  |vR..bhbr...~....|
    00000070  c5 df 3b 5a f8 4b 71 2f  38 c3 4e 36 6f e6 cb f7  |..;Z.Kq/8.N6o...|
    00000080  15 f2 8a 7f a5 bd e5 bd  a3 aa 79 b5 bc 3a 5e 03  |..........y..:^.|
    00000090  af f1 d7 c2 db 3e 1d 4e  df a9 ef 14 d7 94 e0 74  |.....>.N.......t|
    000000a0  3d 85 62 4a 71 4a 7b ca  70 ca 6c 9a be 17 2c bb  |=.bJqJ{.p.l...,.|
    000000b0  3f 29 17 31 95 30 2d ec  1d a9 92 a9 da 69 cd 54  |?).1.0-......i.T|
    000000c0  c7 b4 69 6a 6c 6a 7e 6a  b5 77 24 57 a7 ff 8c c0  |..ijlj~j.w$W....|
    000000d0  2c 78 16 31 a3 32 a3 33  83 72 c6 62 2f 28 8f 59  |,x.1.2.3.r.b/(.Y|
    000000e0  de 4c c4 ac 60 26 7d 26  0f d2 a2 69 9b 35 ce 8c  |.L..`&}&...i.5..|
    000000f0  cd 2c 60 24 64 31 c7 d1  49 64 1e 3a 27 3b a7 3c  |.,`$d1..Id.:';.<|
    00000100  a7 35 67 38 4f e9 e4 3e  e7 3f 17 bd 0f 2e 7d ae  |.5g8O..>.?....}.|
    00000110  60 ae 7c ae b1 57 64 fa  e7 c6 e6 e6 1d 2d bc 3a  |`.|..Wd......-.:|
    00000120  57 0b dc 0b 62 db 21 51  0b ea 0b 7a f6 39 2f f8  |W...b.!Q...z.9/.|
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    00000170  bb c2 be 22 b0 22 b5 8a  5a c5 ac 62 57 50 ae 52  |..."."..Z..bWP.R|
    00000180  57 ec 57 dc 56 b9 2b 91  2b 29 ab b2 95 c2 95 aa  |W.W.V.+.+)......|
    00000190  55 cd 4a f7 ca c8 ca dc  ca 9a cf d0 67 e6 e3 8f  |U.J.........g...|
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    000001d0  18 d7 5d e7 a2 37 ef b2  7b 53 aa b1 37 6f 86 bf  |..]..7..{S..7o..|
    000001e0  a4 de de 3b ce aa b7 72  62 bd a8 53 ed ad 78 72  |...;...rb..S..xr|
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    00000200

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    Thanks for the vote of confidence, Toocool4.
    Hatter, I always search for solutions before I ask - I come to forums as a last resort when I'm not confident about proceeding without some advice. If you don't like the questions I ask, you don't have to get involved and answer. I didn't ask anything about doing backups - I backup my data regularly to an external drive. I asked what "backup system image" meant because I hadn't heard that expression before and I thought it might have been something critical I needed to know before I reinstalled my partition.
    Before I moved over to Mac, I spent 9 years learning how to maintain my own pc, so I've got some idea of what I'm doing. But there are always things to learn, and I'm grateful to those who are willing to share their knowledge - I've used what I've learned to help those of my friends who are real novices, and at times I've even contributed to forums.
    Since I only use my Windows partition for music, I think it'll be simple enough for me to just recreate. The 15-20 percent rule sounds like a good one, Toocool4, and I wish I'd thought of it before! This time I'll build a partition factoring in the size of software, like itunes, as well, and I'll make it big enough to cover everything!
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    Hi,
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    This is expected behavior. On your Mac, the 3TB disk is partitioned to allow Windows to function properly in BIOS mode. BIOS mode (and CSM-BIOS, to be precise) has a limitation of a 2TB disk. on a larger disk (including 3TB Fusion drives), the disk is partitioned in such a manner that the Windows adheres to the 2TB limit.
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