2011 (Windows)

Table Of Contents
3
In the Recover My Computer dialog box, click Custom to start the Recover
Drive Wizard.
4
On the wizard's Welcome panel, click Next.
5
In the Recovery Point to Restore panel, set the options you want.
See
Recovery Point to Restore options on page 217.
6
In the Target Drive panel, select one or more drives that you want to restore,
and then click Next.
If the drive does not have enough space available to restore a recovery point,
press Shift. Select multiple, contiguous destinations that exist on the same
hard disk.
7
If the recovery point is password-protected, in the Password dialog box, type
the password, and then click OK.
8
In the Recovery Options panel, select the restore options you want.
See
Recovery options on page 218.
The options that are available depend on the restore destination that you
have selected.
9
Click Next, and then review your selections.
10
Click Finish, then click Yes.
Sometime the wizard cannot lock the drive to perform the recovery in
Windows (typically, because the drive is in use by a program). In such cases,
make sure that the drive is not in use. For example, close any files or
applications that may be in use, and then click Retry.
If the Retry option fails, click Ignore to attempt a forced lock on the drive.
If Ignore fails, you might be prompted to insert the Symantec System Recovery
Disk. You must then manually start the recovery environment so that you
can complete the recovery. When the recovery is finished, the computer
restarts automatically.
See
Recovering a secondary drive on page 213.
Recovery Point to Restore options
The following table describes the options on the Recovery Pointto Restore panel.
This panel is available from the Recover Drive Wizard.
217Recovering files, folders, or entire drives
Customizing the recovery of a drive