![]() It's pretty clear you're using the graphical shell, as if Ghost is a standard program from your hard drive. My question #4 was asking whether you were working with Ghost from the graphical shell, or as a batch process using the DOS based client. If the external drive is writable in Windows, then the problem is likely procedural to Ghost, and there could be a number of issues causing that error. Can you copy/erase a small test file to that drive from Windows Explorer, thus proving that it is writable? Can you do a chkdsk on your external drive, too, and see if it is error free? If you can do those things successfully, at least you know that the external drive is working at a low level using Windows drive routines, but if it doesn't work in those tests, then Ghost is going to be unable to access the drive until you sort out whatever is stopping communication. Disconnect the 1st HD & configure the 120G HD as master. Use the copy disk feature, selecting the Check source for file system errors, Check destination for file system errors, Set drive active (for starting OS) and Copy MBR options. That was the point of my asking about your File System (FS) on that drive. Boot up Win XP and run Ghost from the lst HD. We don't know, yet, that it sees your external USB drive as a writable device. ![]() Your replies to 1, 2 and 3 tell us that Ghost isn't quitting for basic target or sizing errors.
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