I had similar problems with Ghost 2002. I had just converted my 2 hard drives from FAT 32 to NTFS. I tried to image my primary NTFS partition to the second hard drive, but Ghost couldn't even see the second drive to write to it. I went on Symantec's tech support site, and found out (1) the consumer version of Ghost can SEE NTFS partitions to make an image or a disk to disk copy, but cannot WRITE to an NTFS partition because of the limitations of DOS; and (2) to write to a NTFS partition or drive, you need the corporate version of Ghost. I wasn't about to lay out a bunch more money for a new version of Ghost, so the cheap solution for me was to reformat my second drive to FAT 32. I don't need the security or the other things that NTFS provides on the second hard drive, so little was lost in my case. I think it's a real bummer that Symantec says Ghost 2002 is XP compatible, yet it doesn't really support full NTFS implementations. I think they should have explained this on the box so folks would know the limitations before they buy the product.