Disk utility restore problem: cannot drag internal hdd to destination field

I'm currently trying to restore a time machine backup after my boot ssd recently failed, but am having trouble restoring the backup to my secondary internal drive in the optical bay. My set up isthe following:
Failed ssd in primary hdd  bay of MacBook Pro (mid 2010)
1tb secondary  hdd in optical drive bay with time machine backup of failed ssd.
2tb external drive
The following is what I have done so far...
1. Booted into the secondary internal drive and restored the time machine backup onto the external USB drive.
2. Booted from the restored backup on the USB drive (this now looks like my old computer again but is very slow as its USB 2.0)
3. Partitioned the secondary internal drive in the optical bay.
4. Now I want to copy the restored volume on my USB drive to the secondary internal drive in the optical bay.
When I open disk utility's restore function I can put my original volum in the source field, however, it will not let me put either partition of my internal drive in the destination field. It has no problem putting other partitions from the USB drive in the destination field - just will not allow anything from the internal drive. Why is this?
I'm thinking it could possibly be because it is in the optical drive bay and apple has prevented copying full volumes into this bay, but then again surely this would be needed when burning DVDs at some stage. Any ideas? Many thanks in advance for any help.

I managed to complete the restore and you may have been right - I booted from the internal hdd then restored the time machine backup stored on the usb drive to a different partition on the internal hd. Seemed to work fine now running of the hd in the optical drive bay but has still crashed a couple of times which is pretty odd. Perhaps the failed ssd in the main drive bay is still causing a bit of a nuisance (it registers for the first 3 minutes after booting up then disappears). Also didnt notice the responsiveness too much when upgrading from hd to ssd, but going the other way back to hd - can definitely now tell the difference. Painfully slow at times! I need to get that ssd replaced I think.  Anyway thanks for your advice!

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    I am now doing a restore on the imac but still wondering if this will work, if so I could do my cloning of the HD with out using DeJuVu. the only thing I would lose is the ability to do scheduling.
    Thank You
    Dick

    I never had any problem backing up a clone using DeJuVu. I always backed up to external sata HD's and a Lacie firewire ext. Also when I used CCC this time it worked fine.
    When I bought the OWC Mercury Elite is when I had a problem. After spending a day with there tech dept with no success. I came to the conclusion that only one HD could be booted from there ext 2 drive enclosure. I contacted the the next morning and talked to there senior tech and he confirmed that the enclosure when split using two drives independently that only one was bootable.
    I am not sure why you can't get a complete bootable clone. What are the drives and what are you trying to clone to. Ext, internal or your single drive which you have partitioned?
    I feel if your cloning you should always do it on a separate drive.
    My methods are I never partition and never fill my operating system over half of the drive capacity.
    Dcik

  • Disk Utility Restore Function

    If I use the restore function in Disk Utility to copy me Macintosh HD drive to an external drive, can I later restore it back and have everything the same?
    I am going to reinstall the OS, but am concerned that my last time machine backup may not be up to date and have everything, I can not boot into the HDD, and I know that if I restore the same image I might have the same issues as now with the OS, but that is not my concern at the moment. So, I am copying the Macintosh HD to an external drive using the restore tab and want to make sure that if I do it the other way around, will it be the same and will I have a backup of all my data (particularly my local copies of mail folder) once I restore?
    If this does not work, what is the default location for my mail items so I can pull all those and preferably my preferences along with it as I have a lot of rules and other items in mail that I would like to keep.

    If I use the restore function in Disk Utility to copy me Macintosh HD drive to an external drive, can I later restore it back and have everything the same?
    Yes.
    The Restore option of Disk Utility is for cloning one disk volume to another, also known as a full backup. Clones are 100% reversible. Note that if you use the Restore option of Disk Utility it will erase the target volume. If you are using Lion or later you must boot to the Recovery HD in order to clone the main startup volume.
    Clone using Restore Option of Disk Utility
      1. Open Disk Utility.
      2. Select the destination volume from the left side list.
      3. Click on the Restore tab in the DU main window.
      4. Select the destination volume from the left side list and drag
           it to the Destination entry field.
      5. Select the source volume from the left side list and drag it to
          the Source entry field.
      6. Double-check you got it right, then click on the Restore button.
    Destination means the external backup drive. Source means the internal startup drive.
    To reverse the process simply swap the Source for the Destination and vice-versa.
    Boot to the Recovery HD:
    Restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the COMMAND and R keys until the menu screen appears. Alternatively, restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the OPTION key until the boot manager screen appears. Select the Recovery HD and click on the arrow button below the icon.

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