Posts: 333
Threads: 39
Joined: Oct 2025
Reputation:
16
@admin,
Thank you for the new version. It installed smoothly.
Have a great day.
Regards,
Phil
Posts: 1
Threads: 0
Joined: Feb 2026
Reputation:
0
Yesterday, 02:34 AM
(This post was last modified: Yesterday, 02:35 AM by yastil.)
Thank you very much for the smooth update. The Secure Boot USB worked as well. I wish you every success in your work.
Best regards,
Yastil
Posts: 3,078
Threads: 18
Joined: Feb 2014
Reputation:
228
Hello everyone,
Thank you all for your feedback and testing on the new version! We're glad to hear that the new version installs and works smoothly. And yes, the new executable now includes a digital signature. If you encounter any other issues or have suggestions while using it, please feel free to let us know.
Have a nice day!
Best regards,
Posts: 1
Threads: 0
Joined: May 2026
Reputation:
0
This is actually a really common confusion and worth clarifying for anyone else who runs into the same issue.
When you use disk backup in the emergency environment, it creates a sector-by-sector clone of the disk. The problem is that this method doesn't always capture the boot configuration correctly especially on machines that use eMMC storage alongside a secondary SATA drive. Your Medion notebook setup with DISK0 and DISK1 is exactly the kind of dual-drive configuration where this gets tricky.
What you should use instead is system backup. Here's the difference in simple terms:
Disk Backup copies everything on the disk physically. But boot files, BCD (Boot Configuration Data) and EFI partitions sometimes don't restore cleanly to a different disk or even the same disk in emergency mode.
System Backup specifically designed to capture your Windows OS, boot files, and system partitions together as a unit. When restored, Windows knows how to start itself properly.
For your specific case next time, boot from the Emergency USB, but choose System Backup instead of Disk Backup. Make sure you're selecting the correct target disk (your eMMC DISK1 where Windows was originally installed) during restore.
One more thing worth checking right now go into your BIOS and verify the boot order. After a restore, sometimes the boot priority resets and it tries to boot from the wrong disk entirely. That alone can cause the "NO system found" error even when the restore was technically successful.
Hope this helps and great that the Hasleo team keeps improving the software with each version.