atomicmidi wrote:If the drive to be cloned is smaller than target drive its not a problem, you can do it all the same.
For backup its a fine solution IMHO.
Yes you would indeed have a EXACT copy of the hard drive.
The result would be a clone of the original but on a larger drive and it would therefor
still be formatted in EOS FAT .
This drive is still not readable by a computer.
If you cloned the data to a 120 GB drive it would only show up as
18 GB in the sampler as this is the max that EOS FAT can handle.
If however the data is to be added to a large IDE drive formatted in FAT32 to overcome these limitations then the best route is the procedure I have outlined.
The sampler would need to be running EOS4.7 as this is the only operating system able to work with drives formatted in FAT32.
EOS4.7 will recognise a maximum 137 GB. Which should keep the majority of users happy for a while.
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By the way Rob,
I'm not from a dodgy Scottish 80s band, and I don't sport a mullet.
Link
http://youtu.be/CdqoNKCCt7A