Skylab1 I tried used 4 different restore software none of them worked, still seeing 60 files on the root of the SD card after restore.
As everyone has been trying (and some apparently gave up repeating themselves) to tell you, your macOS machine will only see one volume of an ASIAIR microSD card. The others will be there, but the macOS file system will not see them.
Let me repeat it here:
There is only one volume called BOOT that your Mac can see, because that volume uses the FAT-32 format.
There are two (actually three, if you count the swap volume) other volumes that your Mac (or Windows) will not be able to read because they are formatted in the Linux ext4 format. One of the Linux volumes (sized about 8 GB) has all the standard Unix/Linux stuff like /etc and /lib, etc. The other one (currently a little larger than 40 MB) has the ZWO stuff (and Samba).
If you insist on reading the Linux volumes, you will need a Linux computer, such as a Raspberry Pi, or a kernel extension to macOS, such as Paragon's ExtFS (cheap, but you don't need it, and you may get into trouble trying to install a kernel extension). Do not even try to use Paragon's ExtFS if you don't know what a kernel extension is; you can get into more trouble that is hard to back off from.
But there is no reason for you to read the Linux volumes (unless you want to do things like extending the FOV of a plate solve beyond 0.2 degrees, for example). Just blissfully accept the fact that you will not see those volumes on macOS.
Just use ApplePi-Baker to make a microSD card from an ASIAIR backup.
The archives from ZWO are often in RAR (Roshal) format. If you are using macOS and using Apple-Pi Baker, first expand the RAR file first into an IMG file. You can use the Unarchiver application (free) to do that. Apple-Pi Baker is not always reliable when expanding (or creating) RAR files on the fly on some macOS releases, but seems to work consistent with IMG files (from my experience). The RAR file from ZWO, when expanded, is an IMG (disk image) file and that is what you need to give to Apple-Pi Baker.
If you have problems with version 2 of Apple-Pi Baker, try Version 1. The tweaking4All site has the 64 bit version of version 1. Just search their download page. The difference is that version 1 requires that you to give permission (with password) for full disk access each time you run the program, but otherwise appears perfectly reliable.
I have been able to use both version 1 (the 64 bit version) and version 2 of Apple-Pi Baker on a 2009 Xeon-based MacPro, a 2018 iMac, a 2020 M1 Mac Mini, and a 2020 M1 MacBook Pro. Just make sure you give an IMG file to Apple-Pi Baker, instead of giving it an RAR file. Likewise, when you make an archive, tell Apple-Pi Baker to save to IMG instead of RAR (its default), otherwise that RAR file may not be usable. On a Mac, just keep IMG files as your archive.
Chen