I'd try clonezilla, make an image file to the hard disk, then reboot with the new flash card and restore the image to the flash disk.
Main Topics
Browse All TopicsI have a PCMCIA ATA Flash card with DOS. It conatins an old application. Now I want to copy the PCMCIA flash card to a new one. The card original card is bootable and this is a requirement that the copy is bootable.
This question is in progress.
Our experts are working on an answer right now.
Sign up for immediate access to the solution once it becomes available.
Experts Exchange has been collecting answers to technology questions since 1996…3 million and counting! If you have a question, chances are we already have your answer.
If you can't find the exact answer you're looking for, ask our exclusive community of 50,000 experts. You’ll get a personalized answer from a trusted professional.
Thousands of free tech tips, tricks, how-to’s and tutorials are available in our peer reviewed articles section. See for yourself how smart our experts are, no login required.
Access the answers to your technology questions today.
30-day free trial. Register in 60 seconds.
Members of the expert community talk about why the experience at Experts Exchange is different than what you will find anywhere else.

Try it out and discover for yourself.
30-day free trial. Register in 60 seconds.
Join the community of experts here and help other tech pros by answering question in your area of expertise. You can earn FREE access to all Experts Exchange's premium features and resources.
Business Accounts
Answer for Membership
by: rindiPosted on 2009-09-22 at 15:27:29ID: 25398174
Try something that makes an image file, like bootit-ng, and then restore that image file to the new media. If the new media is similar it may be bootable. If the new media is different there may be other things needed.
om/
http://terabyteunlimited.c