Cloning with Macrium, from a smaller to a larger drive, involves a simple manual operation.The default clone is to copy all source partitions and sizes. Macrium provides a proposed layout for the target drive. Thus when the target is larger, the schema will show the NTFS partition with unallocated space . One just expands the divider to include all the available space and then clone away.
Macrium by default will copy only the sectors with data.When the target drive is smaller, there is no unallocated space and the data itself is copied. I haven't looked into what happens when the data is larger than the available NTFS partition.
I'll take another look at Macrium for what you describe. In my case, I had dual-boot with sys-reserved, EFI, Win7Boot and Win10boot partitions. And I think I tried to do what you described, and ran into problems. Of course, it might be easier or less uncertain to work with a single-OS system. I know that Acronis -- for chipsets and drives known to work with whichever version of Disk Director or True Image -- allowed proportional resizing that was fairly robust in the way the user could control it.
Oddly, when I was doing advance research for how Macrium could do it on the web, I ran into forum posts that indicated it would only copy the partitions in the size of the sources, and someone explained the resizing that could be done after imaging the drive with Macrium.
Has anyone tried
Mini Tool ? Indications I found -- forums, testaments, etc. -- suggest a fairly robust utility as good as the best. I'd be interested if someone has firsthand experience. Otherwise, it's not a major outlay of an entrance fee to try it. Maybe there's even a trial version, and I'll look at that link more closely.