New
#21
The sources folder can be big- the OS..
Perform Bare-Metal Recovery: User Guide for Veeam Endpoint Backup
- not exactly helpful here, as it doesn't point to a local source.
Bare Metal backup recovery with recovery medias
Comment below confirms it supports restore to dissimilar hardware.
Could the iso he's got just be the Veeam Recovery Medium?
Bare Metal Restore with Veeam Endpoint Backup: A Step-by-Step Guide
I know this does not help OP but Veeam is really geared for the corporate market. It is not even clear what the Macrium Reflect Free equivalent (Veeam Agent) as they have a tool Macrium Backup which is different.
Even creating a bootable usb flash drive is not obvious. I loaded it a few days ago and could not find anyway of creating a flash drive from Veeam Agent. You actually have to run a separate program - which is possibly why OP has got into difficulties. Even as a relatively old hand from Norton Ghost days, this floored me for a while.
The drop down list for drives do not always show immediately e.g. an sd card, without forcing a sort of refresh.
Dragging an dropping partitions as you can do with Reflect eg when you want to reorder them for example is a simple gui excercise. In Agent, you have to go through partition selection menus one at a time which is slow and not intuitive, and if you make a mistake, not easy to revert and correct without starting over.
I actually emailed some videos doing above with Agent and Reflect, to one of their developers who was adamant their GUI was easier than Reflect, showing him precisely the opposite, and he sort of "ummmed and ahhhed" and gave a cop out "thank for your feedback" reply.
Of the main players, I think Easeus Todo Backup Free has one of the simplest GUIs, but it is SO SLOW but is a reliable tool.
AOMEI Backupper has a quite simple GUI but so simple, there is little flexibility.
Good old Reflect's GUI's is not the simplest I admit, but it is highly featured and is pretty much a "one stop shop". It really only takes a few minutes following @Kari's excellent tutorials, and you can pick up basics in no time. There are many youtube guides as well.
Recovery that way depends on recovery partition that keeps all relevant information and if you killed all partitions and reformatted, it's all gone now, nothing to restore. Might as well do clean windows install. In the future, you are better off making full backup of all partitions, keep it on separate disk and keep personal data backup on another.