N8, I'm curious, why would you want this to happen? If TRIM is disabled during restoration then all the blocks in the SSD being restored to would be left orphaned and unavailable to the FileSystem under Windows (unless the garbage collection algorithm used by the SSD is smarter than most... they're all different). If anything, the TRIMming of the blocks being restored, prior to restoration (the way Macrium REFLECT does it), guarantees no orphaned blocks caused by the restoration by itself. Under any case, following the restoration (having used no TRIM), any periodic optimization by the OS after the restoration would free up those orphaned blocks anyway, unless the user never optimizes their disks during normal operation. That would result in tons of orphaned SSD blocks that would eventually affect (slow down) SSD throughput.
As far as TRIMming the image target during the imaging operation, that doesn't make any sense at all due to the way Windows allocation and TRIM actually operate... not really a requirement here.
As far as TRIMming the image target during the imaging operation, that doesn't make any sense at all due to the way Windows allocation and TRIM actually operate... not really a requirement here.