Apple is replacing my 27" iMac Hard Drive and when I get it back, I want to know how do I restore from Time Machine to before the hard drive failed

My hard drive (1TB) failed this week on my Late 2009 27" iMac and I took it into the Apple Store.  They confirmed the problem was the hard drive after a couple tests and offered to replace it for $260.  I have everything backed up on my Time Capsule within Time Machine and am wondering how I can restore my entire PC (all my files, settings, etc) from my last back up a couple days ago.  I am assuming it is a simple fix, but I want to have a good plan when it comes back...if there are articles or other threads you can point me to, I would apprecite it.  I am looking forward to getting a refreshed computer back but it would be great to have it fully restore from my last backup.
Thanks!

http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1427

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    Give this a try:
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    I got a recall and had the drive replaced. I have retored 3 timesa dn even had apple do the job and it is still not right. I still can't get a simple ghost of the data from time machineback tot he new drive. 
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    Message was edited by: funman895

  • HT201250 My macbook pro crashed and I had to install a new hard drive. I restored from Time Machine backup all the files from my old hard drive onto my new one.

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  • Restoring from Time Machine to an external hard drive

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    Dan Bryant1 wrote:
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    Hi,
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    This web site might answer all of your Time machine questions:
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  • Restoring from Time Machine backup to a smaller drive. Size of backup is more than data on source drive. how can I fix this?

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  • How to restore from Time Machine onto an external drive

    Hi all,
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    Allamistakeo wrote:
    Hi all,
    I am a backup freak, and I don't feel entirely safe with Time Machine taking care of backing up my system unless I can test every now and then that I would be able to do a full restore. I've had problems in the past with .Mac/MobileMe's Backup.app, which would not be able to restore from an otherwise apparently successful backup, for one reason or another.
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  • HT201250 I recently replaced my 2009 Macbook Pro's hard drive.  I had the Apple store upgrade the OS to Mountain Lion while it was being repaired.  I want to restore all of my old files and data, if I restore from Time Machine, will it revert to the old O

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  • Had to install a new hard drive early 2008 iMac, now can't restore from Time Machine.

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    Alilynx wrote:
    I appeared to have a full functioning Macbook Pro, until I ran Onyx, and after scanning my hard drive, it said that there were issues....
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    Disk Utility on the Macintosh HD partition (in OS X) is telling you to boot into Recovery HD partition and use that version of Disk Utiltiy to repair the Macintosh HD partition. To do this you hold the command and r keys down and boot the computer.
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    Yes because to be able to repair the Macintosh HD partition it can't be booted from, why you instead boot from the Recovery HD partition instead.
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    You don't need to go that far at this point, unless the drive is having mechanical issues.
    OS X said to backup, erase my drive and restore, so should I do a restore from Time Machine?
    You  have software issues, when booted from the Recovery HD partition that version of Disk Utiltity says it can't repair the Macintosh HD partition then it's time to erase the Macintosh HD partition and restore from TimeMachine.
    However there could be a problem if the data on your TimeMachine drive is not current or is also corrupted which it copied from the failing internal drive.
    You might want to perform data recovery steps first to grab your data off the Macintosh HD partition so you have a clean copy.
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    If this is all above your head, your local PC/Mac repair shop will image your current boot drive to a new extenral drive, then erase the Macintosh HD partition and reinstall OS X for you or restore from TimeMachine etc.
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    It all depends how important your data is, because if you go and erase the Macintosh HD partition, your destroying one of your copies leaving only one on the TimeMachine drive, which might be in worst shape or outdated without your knowledge.

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