Drive upgrade questions

I have a MPB that's about 18 months old. I have the AppleCare extended warranty with it.
My 160 GB drive is 3/4 full but I can stay on top of it with periodic cleanups. Eventually though I'll have to make a decision about an upgrade.
Question -- can I (either by myself or at an Apple Store or elsewhere) replace my internal drive w/o voiding my extended warranty? And is Superduper (do I have that right) the best app to ghost an image of my current HD to a potentially new HD?

You could replace the drive yourself. It's not a simple project, but it is doable. However, any consequential damage caused by your replacing the drive will void the warranty with respect to those repairs. Having the work done by an Apple Certified Technician will prevent that from happening.
Unfortunately, most Apple service centers that replace drives may insist on keeping the drive they remove. Although technically what you want to do is not really a warranty replacement of a defective drive, they may insist on it. If they do and that's not a problem for you, then you can have the shop clone your old drive to the new one for you.
If you choose to do the work yourself you will find an excellent video tutorial at MacSales.com. They are also a good choice for purchasing a new drive.
Cloning the drive doesn't require any third-party software. You can use the Restore option of Disk Utility to clone the drive:
How to Clone Using Restore Option of Disk Utility
1. Open Disk Utility from the Utilities folder.
2. Select the destination volume from the left side list.
3. Click on the Erase tab in the DU main window. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (journaled, if available) and click on the Erase button. This step can be skipped if the destination has already been freshly erased.
4. Click on the Restore tab in the DU main window.
5. Select the destination volume from the left side list and drag it to the Destination entry field.
6. Select the source volume from the left side list and drag it to the Source entry field.
7. Double-check you got it right, then click on the Restore button.
Destination means the drive to which you will clone the old drive.
Source means the drive you are cloning from.

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    The reason for the long preparing stage is that TM, seeing a different drive, is examining every file and folder on your system, and may do a full backup of your entire system.
    Download the +Time Machine Buddy+ widget. It shows the messages from your logs for one TM backup run at a time, in a small window. You'll probably see a message about a UUID error referencing your internal drive --that means TM doesn't recognize it as the same one it last backed-up.
    Then you'll probably see one about a "deep traversal." That means TM is looking at every file and folder on your system to see what needs to be backed-up. This takes quite a while, of course, and you won't see anything being backed-up (xx MB of yy GB) until it's done.
    If TM does perform a full backup, it may have to delete a lot of your old backups to make room for the new one. If it can't delete enough, it will fail.

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