We previously reviewed
Canadian company R-Tools’ R-Studio, a good but complex data recovery tool,
in 2006.
By contrast, R-Drive Image is a bit of a welcome surprise, since it is
unexpectedly simple and very easy to use. The software features a graphical boot
mode that makes it possible to restart directly from Windows to restore data to
the system and other locked partitions, in many cases eliminating the need to
use a restore CD.
The program does have the ability to generate restore disks, either by
burning directly to a CD or DVD, as an Iso image for burning to a CD using a
third-party burning software, or even to a couple of 3.5in floppy disks if you
wish.
Installation using the R-Tools install wizard is simple and very fast, but
does require a reboot. The full downloaded program can be used for 15 days for
evaluation purposes. Paying customers receive a registration key by email to
unlock the software.
From the start-up screen you are offered eight possible task choices; Create
an image, Restore from an image, Copy a disk to a disk, Connect an image as a
virtual logical disk, Create start-up disks, Check an image file,
Schedule/create a script and Disconnect virtual logical disks.
There is no menu toolbar and all operations are wizard- rather than
console-based, so for example clicking the Disk Image icon on the opening screen
leads to a series of further screens, as each step of the backup setup unfolds.
Images and files are stored with the .arc file extension, a well-established
archive file format. Unfortunately R-Drive Image doesn’t provide a log file and,
although a progress bar is displayed during a backup, there is no record of time
taken to complete a task.
R-Drive Image can create images of single or multiple partitions, a logical
disk, or an entire hard drive. It doesn’t provide individual folder or file
backup but you can choose to restore individual folders or files from a backup
image. The ‘Copy a disk to disk’ option does exactly that, allowing you to make
a clone rather than creating an image file. Image verification is a separate
step, accessed via the ‘Check an image’ icon. This is a process that can take
some time, but it’s certainly advisable, particularly before archiving an image.
All R-Drive Image actions can be scripted, by recording while stepping
through the necessary wizard. The script is saved as a command line and can be
included and run with other commands in a command-line batch file.
To explore and access the files in an R-Tools image you have to mount it as a
virtual disk, by assigning it a logical drive letter using the Connect an image
wizard. The image will then appear on the host system as a logical disk and can
be explored via Windows Explorer.
R-Tools says that its technical support is available 24/7 and that the
average email response time is less than four hours. Telephone support is
available from 9am-6pm (Eastern Time), Monday through Friday, but since it’s a
Canadian operation, this may limit its appeal to UK residents.
Although it’s not as full featured as some disk-imaging tools there’s
something very appealing about R-Drive Image, it looks good and the user
interface is easy to use, with no loose ends, or confusing multiple paths.
This article is part of a
group
test drive-imaging software.
See also:
Acronis
True Image 10 Home
Paragon
Hard Disk Manager 8
Runtime
Software Drive Image XML
Symantec
Norton Save & Restore
Graphs and table of features can be read via our pdf download above.
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