britechguy
Well-Known Member
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The only reason I thought it might be one now is because even the cloned drive produced the same results as her original drive and I wasn't sure enough about the cloning to know whether or not a virus would escape cloning or come over with it.
Cloning does what it's name implies: Clones.
So if you have a hideously corrupted Windows instance on the source drive, you will have exactly the same hideously corrupted Windows instance on the destination drive. If you had an infection on the source drive, you will have exactly the same infection on the destination drive. Lather, rinse, repeat.
If, however, the problem was mainly with the source drive's own hardware, you can sometimes get a "miracle revival" with a clone, but it's quite rare, because a failing source drive generally means you're not going to get a good, complete, functioning result on the cloned drive.