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Installing Windows 7 RC from a USB thumb drive

Posted by: Pete Stagman on 5/19/2009

Installing Windows 7 RC from a USB thumb drive

This procedure also works for installing Windows Home Server, Vista, Windows Server, or just as a plain old boot disk. If you just want a boot disk, you'll still need to put some files on the prepped USB stick.

There are a lot of reasons to install from a USB stick rather than a DVD. The number one reason is speed, installing from the thumb drive is many times faster than a DVD. Another reason may be that you want to edit the cversion.ini file so you can upgrade from a previous beta.

The first thing you want to do is make sure that your computer CAN be booted from a USB stick. You’ll have to check your BIOS or the manufacturer’s website to see if your computer is USB bootable.

There are far too many different models to try to cover them here.

Second, make sure you have a USB stick that has enough room. For Windows 7 - 32bit you’ll need roughly 3GB and for 64bit you’ll need roughly 4GB.
Now that you have a thumb drive that’s the right size we can prepare it for booting.
To do this we’ll use the “Diskpart” utility from a command prompt.
Open a command prompt as Administrator.

From the DOS prompt type diskpart

 

Next, insert your USB Thumb Drive into a free USB port. We’ll need to figure out which drive your USB is so from the DISKPART> prompt type: list disk and hit enter

 

Here, you see that I have 3 disks listed. Disk 0 is my Hard Drive, Disk 1 is a 514MB partition on my built in flash drive, Disk 2 is an 8GB drive. Since the USB stick I inserted is 8GB, that must be it.

We want to use disk 2, so from the DISKPART> prompt type: select disk 2

 

To make sure that there’s nothing on the USB stick that will interfere with our booting, we’ll wipe out any partition information on the stick.

WARNING! This will wipe this stick clean! It will delete and destroy any data on this stick.

From the DISKPART> prompt type: clean

 

Now we want to create our primary partition for booting.

From the DISKPART> prompt type: create partition primary

 

Now we want to change to that partition and make it an active or bootable partition.
From the DISKPART> prompt type: select partition 1

When that step completes type: active

 

Next we need to format our active partition and assign a drive letter to the boot partition.
From the DISKPART> prompt type: format fs=fat32

When the format completes, type: assign

 

You can now exit DISKPART and close the command prompt.
The USB stick is now ready to boot. Next we need to copy the files from the ISO to the stick. You’ll need to mount the ISO file as a drive using something like Daemon Tools. You can download daemon tools from http://www.daemon-tools.cc/eng/downloads. You may need to reboot your PC after installing Daemon Tools.
Mount the ISO as a drive then copy ALL the files from the ISO to your new USB stick.  You should now be able to boot from the USB stick and do a full install of Windows 7RC1!
If you are trying to do an upgrade install from an older Beta, you are probably getting an error that “Your version of Windows cannot be upgraded”. To get around this, open the USB stick you just created in an explorer window. Browse to the “/Sources” folder and look for the file named cversion.ini, edit the file and look for the line “MinClient=7077.0”. Change the 70xx to 7000. Save the file and run the setup again.
 

clubhouse, media center, windows media center, how-to, Tip

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5 Comments

    • Aug 25 2010, 9:00 AM nokia games
    • i' ve been test it and working..nice tutorial thanks for sharing.

    • Aug 25 2010, 8:58 AM Online Casino umsonst
    • Thanks for such a beautifully composed, informative article.I think your designing work to this is really great .I really appreciate your work to this site.So thanks for it.I hope you can continue this type of hard work to this site in future also..Because this blog is really very informative and it helps me lot.

    • Mar 07 2010, 9:08 AM Online Casino umsonst
    • I use pretty much the same method. I created a folder and named it "BluRay". I then create a folder for the movie I am ripping.Very nice post, and very nice setup. I'm slowly working my way towards that, however I'm using a PS3 to bring the media to my plasma which works pretty well so far. Next step is to bring stored BluRay into the game!

    • Mar 31 2010, 7:07 AM gioco del casinò online
    • Thanks for this very useful guide. I followed the instructions and am currently using windows 7 rc on my aspire one. With only 16 GB flash drive on my aspire I had to make room for 7 rc by removing most applications but I am glad that I did because I find 7 rc much more responsive and useable than XP on the resource limited aspire one. It is much better now at multi tasking and so far all is fine. I am very happy I installed it.

    • Aug 25 2010, 8:49 AM Contact Center
    • It’s a question for all that how to install the windows 7 Release Candidate from a USB thumb drive. This post contains the solution for this question. Step by step procedures required for the installation from USD drive is explained in detail with the help of the screenshots of command prompt with each command required to be typed. The procedures are easily understandable even by a non-experienced person as the screenshots are provided. I will definitely suggest this post with all those who are looking to install Windows 7 from their USB pendrive.

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"Thanks Pete, I believe they will work since they do have 2 4x ports and support both SAS and SATA. One way to find out for sure I suppose" Read more
by Chris on Rosewill RSV-S8 External Drive enclosure

"I don't know those particular controllers. But the drive enclosure should work with any Port multiplying SATA controller. You would need 2 port multipliers on the controller, each port controls 4 drives in the enclosure.

-- Pete
"
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by Pete Stagman on Rosewill RSV-S8 External Drive enclosure

"I'm looking at this enclosure, does anyone know if it'd work with an HP smart array controller? ie, P800 or E500 or something? Thanks" Read more
by Chris on Rosewill RSV-S8 External Drive enclosure

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