Software

How To Restore A Single File Or A Folder From A Backup Image Using AOMEI Backupper

Perhaps, you accidentally deleted data from your disk (or just forgot to copy or move a file or a folder from your system drive, formatted disk C and reinstalled Windows from a scratch) but you know you have it in your backup copy created with AOMEI Backupper. How to recover files or folders without restoring the whole disk? In fact, this is very easy. AOMEI Backupper offers an extremely useful feature which allows you to mount backup images as virtual drives.

Mount an Image As A Virtual Disk

  1. Launch AOMEI Backupper.
  2. Head to “Utilities” > “Explore Image”: 
  3. Browse a previously created backup. You can either select a backup from the list or click on “Path” and specify a path to another image: 
  4.  Let’s say we decide to browse a path manually, because we have a recently installed copy of Windows. Find the proper file, select it and click “Open”:
  5. Select a backup point from the image and click “Next”:
  6. Assign drive letters to partitions inside the backup and click “Next”:
  7. Click “Finish”.

How to Restore A File Or A Folder From Your Backup

  1. Now you can open the virtual disk and browse your backup image: 
  2. In such a way I can copy the folder from the backup and paste it to your hard drive:

Unmount the Image

When you restored all information, it is time to unmount the image. You have two options:

  1. Reboot your PC.
  2. Go to “Utilities” > “Explore Image” and click “Detach”:

That’s it. Tell us whether or not you use this feature and how often! We also love when you share our tutorials with your friends! 🙂

Adam Swift

Adam is a real tech maniac. He likes to spend time testing phones, tablets, laptops, as well as any other technical devices, and write practical manuals on their functions. He often sleeps all day, but always works at night. Adam bought his first computer in 1999, being an absolute beginner who never held a computer mouse in his hands. He began to study Windows, constantly experimented and often crashed the operating system. But six months later, he was able to reinstall Windows 98 from a scratch on his own, fix almost any software problem on a PC, he also did hardware upgrades and realized that computers, operating systems and programs are now his biggest passion. In addition, Adam has always been a big lover of phones. With the advent of smartphones with Android OS, he began to pick at them much more than in computers. Now Adam loves to study privacy issues in instant messengers, blocking unwanted calls and other nuances related to privacy and security on the network. You can follow him on Twitter: https://twitter.com/tunecomp

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Adam Swift

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