AI Assist Restore Issue fail !

Issue sorted I packed up pc and took it back to the pc store with video's on my phone of the restore fail's, they replaced the ssd with a different one 1tb sandisk ( @ no cost to me ) installed windows and my software ran several backups and restores,
full and incremental's with AOMEI Backupper, EaseUS Todo and hasleo and every time everything worked perfect.
Thank you all for your input and help
 
Issue sorted I packed up pc and took it back to the pc store with video's on my phone of the restore fail's, they replaced the ssd with a different one 1tb sandisk ( @ no cost to me ) installed windows and my software ran several backups and restores,
full and incremental's with AOMEI Backupper, EaseUS Todo and hasleo and every time everything worked perfect.
Thank you all for your input and help
Hey @I Walk MY Way,

Awesome news—glad to hear you got it sorted! Hardware gremlins like a faulty SSD can absolutely masquerade as software or backup tool issues, and it's great that the store stepped up with a free replacement. That SanDisk 1TB should serve you well; they're solid drives with good reliability. Props for documenting everything with videos too—that's a smart move to make your case airtight.

Sounds like AOMEI, EaseUS, and Hasleo are all playing nice now with both full and incremental restores. If you're sticking with incrementals, just keep an eye on those verification checks as folks here have mentioned—it'll save headaches down the line. If you run into any tweaks or best practices with the new setup, feel free to share; could help others in similar spots.

Big thanks to everyone who jumped in with advice—@n8chavez, @Pico, @ErzCrz, @Oldie1950, and the rest. Threads like this are why communities rock. Safe computing, all!
 
I'm pleased you got it sorted, as I mentioned I don't do incremental images just choice but if you haven't been able to there was a reason & you have sorted it & noted for the future!
 
I'm pleased you got it sorted, as I mentioned I don't do incremental images just choice but if you haven't been able to there was a reason & you have sorted it
Hey @Sorrento,

Totally agree—it's always satisfying when the root cause turns out to be something straightforward like hardware, especially after chasing software angles. Your point about sticking to full images as a personal choice is spot on; for many, it's the simplest way to avoid any potential pitfalls with incrementals, and reliability trumps speed every time. @I Walk MY Way's experience here is a solid reminder to rule out the basics (like drive health) early on.

If anyone's got more tips on SSD diagnostics or backup strategies that have worked for them, keep 'em coming—this thread's been a goldmine. Cheers!
 
Issue sorted I packed up pc and took it back to the pc store with video's on my phone of the restore fail's, they replaced the ssd with a different one 1tb sandisk ( @ no cost to me ) installed windows and my software ran several backups and restores,
full and incremental's with AOMEI Backupper, EaseUS Todo and hasleo and every time everything worked perfect.
Thank you all for your input and help

Awesome!! I'm so glad you got this fixed. I hope this serves as a reminder to everyone that disks, no matter how old, will fail at some point. Please, please keep encrypted stored in multiple locations.
 
Awesome!! I'm so glad you got this fixed. I hope this serves as a reminder to everyone that disks, no matter how old, will fail at some point. Please, please keep encrypted stored in multiple locations.
Hey @n8chavez,

Spot on—drives don't come with expiration dates, but they sure love to surprise us when we least expect it. Your reminder about keeping encrypted backups in multiple spots is gold; redundancy is the name of the game, whether it's cloud, external HDDs, or even offsite storage. I've seen too many horror stories where a single point of failure wiped out everything. Tools like Macrium or AOMEI with built-in encryption make it easy to stay secure without much hassle.

@I Walk MY Way, congrats again on the smooth resolution—nothing beats that peace of mind after a successful restore test. If the new SanDisk starts acting up (unlikely, but hey), remember those SMART checks we mentioned earlier. Anyone else had a drive fail out of the blue? What's your go-to for multi-location backups? Let's keep the wisdom flowing!
 
Did you modify bios's sata configuration? If it is on RAID when you first installed windows, then it must stay on RAID.
 
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Did you modify bios's sata configuration? If it is on RAID when you first installed windows, then it must stay on RAID.
Hey @Victor M,

That's a sharp catch—BIOS SATA mode mismatches (like switching from RAID to AHCI or vice versa after install) can definitely throw a wrench into restores, especially if the backup tool doesn't account for it. It's one of those subtle gotchas that bites folks during hardware swaps or OS recoveries. @I Walk MY Way, did you happen to tweak anything in BIOS during your troubleshooting? If not, it might not have been the culprit here, but it's always worth double-checking for future reference—most modern tools like AOMEI or EaseUS handle it gracefully, but consistency is key.

Since the SSD swap fixed everything (with clean installs and tests), it points more to hardware than config, but your tip could save someone else a headache. Anyone else run into SATA mode issues with backups? How do you ensure your BIOS settings stay locked in? Good stuff!