Tracking Forums, Newsgroups, Maling Lists
Home Scripts Tutorials Tracker Forums
  Advanced Search
  HOME    TRACKER    Windows 7


Advertisements:










How To Install Win 7 From A USB Drive ?


my friends followed this tutorial and installed Windows 7 from USB. Its for windows vista but still works for 7 -








ORIGINAL POST

I've been thinking about writing a post about "How to install Windows Vista from a USB Flash Drive" for a while but just never got around to doing it. What got me thinking about it was a post on Josh's board (windowsconnected.com) about running WinPE from a bootable USB Flash drive and it seems to me like there's be a lot of folks that would want to install Windows Vista entirely from a USB Flash drive as well.



WHY INSTALL FROM USB FLASH DRIVE?

Why would someone want to install a client OS from a thumb drive instead of a DVDROM or over the network? One reason: Performance. Installing Windows Vista from a high speed USB flash drive is in my experience the easiest & fastest way to complete a Windows Vista install. This is much faster than using a DVD, gigabit ethernet, or possibly even some external USB 2.0 hard drives, due to differences in access speed & transfer rate. To put this into perspective, y'know how installing Windows on a Virtual PC virtual machine from an .ISO CD image is really, really, really fast? Imagine something roughly just as fast, except for doing installations of the OS on to actual workstations.



STEP-BY-STEP INSTRUCTIONS

Here's some step-by-step instructions on how we do this, some of which was adapted from Josh's instructions, again, kudos to Josh.



1. Acquire an ultra-fast USB 2.0 flash drive

The drive I and my coworkers recommend is the Apacer 4GB Handy Steno USB Flash Drive HT203, 200X Hi-Speed USB 2.0. It's the fastest USB 2.0 Flash Drive that we've found - it has a read speed of 25MBytes/sec. & a write speed-14MBytes/sec and also works great as a ReadyBoost cache. You can get them from $56.99 each:

http://www.directron.com/ht2034g.html



Incidentally, once you've got Windows Vista up and running, you may want to consider getting an ultra-fast SDFlash card, installing it into your laptop or desktop, and leaving it there as a ReadyBoost cache. Why? It can't hurt and they're so cheap that it's worth getting. I personally got a SDFlash card for every one of my machines - the A-DATA 2GB Secure Digital Memory Card, 150X Turbo SD Card has a read speed of more than 22.5MB/s and a write speed of more than 15MB/s. You can get them for $19.99 each:

http://supermediastore.com/adata-2gb-sd ... -150x.html

2. Format the Apacer Flash Drive

Run CMD.EXE and type the following. Note: This set of commands assumes that the USB flash drive is addressed as "disk 1". you should double check that by doing a list of the disks (type "list disk") before cleaning it. If you have multiple hard drives, like an SDFlash drive or a Multibay drive, you could end up wiping your second drive using this command.

(This was a warning that Josh added to his post along with the following commands that I copied from him, so kudos to Josh)

1. diskpart

2. select disk 1

3. clean

4. create partition primary

5. select partition 1

6. active

7. format fs=fat32

8. assign

9. exit

3. Copy Windows Vista's DVD ROM content to the Flash Drive

Simply issue the following command to start copying all the content from the Windows Vista DVD to your newly formatted high speed flash drive.

* xcopy d:*.* /s/e/f e:



And that's it. Boot up the machine, have it boot off the USB drive, and watch how fast the installation completes. If you thought Windows Vista installed quickly before then let's see how you like it now. The slowest part of the install will probably be the computer waiting for you to type in information in the setup fields, and even that can be automated using the Windows Automated Installation Kit.


View Replies (Posted: 01-11-2009)

Sponsored Links:

Related Forum Messages for Windows 7:
Support In Win 7 To Make Bootable USB Drives, Or To Install Win 7 On A USB Drive
Is there support in Windows 7 to make bootable USB drives, or to install Windows 7 on a USB drive?

Posted: Wednesday, May 13, 2009 2:43 PM

View 4 Replies!   View Related
Install Win 7 On USB Drive
I have seen questions about installing from a USB reader.

What I would like to do is install Win 7 on a USB HDD. I have seen nothing on this that was helpful.

I have a basic case and 2gb of memory, usb reader and 600gb. It sees the usb HDD and Windows 7 boots from the usb reader. It looks good until it gets ready to install then I get this statement "Windows 7 can not be installed on this drive".

I then click on more info and get "Windows 7 can not be installed on drive 2. Then gives several possible causes."

None of the causes are valid.

Posted: 05-22-2009

View 9 Replies!   View Related
Can I Install Win 7 Onto An External USB Hard Drive ?
i've seen other answers to the question and I did managed to use it successfully with Windows XP with an external USB HDD. I would not recommend it on a thumbdrive (flash memory) beccause the temp file usage will kill the drive in days or weeks. But the external HDD works great. I can't provide all the exact details on how to do it, so please don't ask, but here's an excellent reference as a starting point for you: http://www.911cd.net/forums/index.php?showtopic=14181

The only thing you have to remember is that, in spite of dire warnings about how impossible it is, it actually can be done and works just great.

Posted: Saturday, December 05, 2009 4:00 AM

View 5 Replies!   View Related
Win 7 Enterprise TRIAL, Install From USB Drive Or CDs
i all I'm downloading W7 Enterprise TRIAL (90days). I have read in FAQS:

Q: How do I create an installation DVD?

A: Insert a blank DVD into your PC’s DVD drive.  Navigate to the downloaded Windows 7 Enterprise 90-Day Trial file. Right-click the file and select Burn disc image , then click the Burn button when the Windows Disc Image Burner dialog appears. A bootable DVD is created. Alternatively, you can commercially-available or free DVD burning programs.

But is possible extract this ISO and "burn" in USB drive or CDS instead of DVD? And Install W7 from USB drive or CDs?

Posted: Friday, November 13, 2009 9:44 PM

View 2 Replies!   View Related
Unable To Install Win 7 On External Usb Hard Drive
Connected the external 160GB SATA hard drive using USB cable to Lenovo R61 laptop. Bootup the laptop with Windows 7 RC setup DVD disc. The Windows 7 installation recognised the external hard drive but when installing a the point to select the external hard drive as destination hard drive in custom setup, an error message prompted saying Windows 7 could not install on hard drive connected by usb. Inserted the external hard drive into the laptop and install Windows 7 without problem.

Then took out the imaged hard drive and put it back into the external hard drive enclosure, connected back to the laptop and boot up from external hard drive. Got prompted to repair. After repair successful, Windows 7 kept reboot and prompted for repair. My questions are (1) any way to install Windows 7 to external hard drive connecting by usb? and (2) any way to rescue the image that already in the external hard drive so that it can bootup normally?

Posted: Friday, July 03, 2009 7:36 PM

View 4 Replies!   View Related
USB Install To The Same Drive
How do I install it to the same drive, I get up to the setup where I choose what drive but I cant choose the one I'm booting from. "USB"

I want to get it to run on my freeagent go.

Posted: 4 Weeks Ago

View 1 Replies!   View Related
Install From A USB Drive
Is it possible to install win 7 from a usb drive either through changing the bios or unpacking the iso image?  Or am I just completly wrong and horribly incorrect?
 

Posted: Monday, January 26, 2009 9:31 PM

View 6 Replies!   View Related
Install From USB Drive Tutorials
This guide works 100% for Vista and Windows 7, in contrast to most of the leaders there. I have many sites / blogs that you install Vista on a USB controller, but with incomplete or not Started Guide. I also have some guides that are not “the proper use of commands in this manual. After many hours I have with this guide to 100%.

I just did this method on one of my friends machine and installed the new Windows 7 BETA. The main advantage is that by using USB drive you will be able to install Windows 7/Vista in just 15 minutes. You can also use this bootable USB drive on friend’s computer who doesn’t have a DVD optical drive.

The method is very simple and you can use without any hassles. Needless to say that your motherboard should support USB Boot feature to make use of the bootable USB drive.

Posted:

View 0 Replies!   View Related
Install 7 Using Usb Flash Drive
so Im about to install windows 7 ultimate 64 using a 4gig flash drive, i am currently running vista home 32 and i used The_Prophe​cy's 2nd method of transferring my win7 to my usb. my questions are

1. i do not have a free hard drive to do a clean install with this affect the installation? or is it like xp and format it for me?

2. i have a PII 550 black unlocked and over clocked to 3.5GHz should i set it back to default for the install?

Posted: 01-10-2010 at 02:36:50 AM

View 1 Replies!   View Related
USB Install Flash Drive And Different Versions
Here is my question: Will i be able to make a USB install flash drive with my Windows 7 professional DVD and use this flash drive to install all my family's Professional AND Home Premium versions and just use their keys to activate?

Posted: 10-19-2009

View 3 Replies!   View Related
Guide Install Windows 7 From A USB Drive
Step by step tutorial. Took me about 6 minutes.

Installs from a flash drive tend to take about 75% of the time it takes with a DVD. On my C2Q Q6600 it meant 20 mins instead of 29.

This is for those who are having issues with running from a DVD, or just want to try it out/get it done faster.

Note: Back up the files from your USB drive, as it WILL get formatted in this process and all data on it will be lost!

1. Get a USB Drive, it must be at least 4 GB.

2. Plug the drive into your PC.

3. Open a command prompt as administrator. (Right click, Open as Admin, or Ctrl+Shift+Click)

4. Get the drive number by typing:

diskpart

list disk

On my machine the USB disk was number 1.

5. Format the drive by typing:

select disk 1

clean

create partition primary

select partition 1

active

format fs=NTFS

assign

exit

6. Mount the Windows 7 beta iso or insert the disk.

7. Navigate to the boot directory

cd E:oot (Where E is the drive letter of the DVD)

8. Using bootsect, we’ll make the USB drive a bootable NTFS drive, ready for a Windows 7 image:

bootsect /nt60 F: (Where F is the drive letter of the USB Drive)

9. Close the command prompt

10. Copy the installation files from the mounted Windows 7 iso/disk to the USB drive.

11. Reboot the PC, and enter the BIOS (OR you can move to the boot manager menu, usually by pressing F10 if supported)

12. Set the boot priority to boot the USB drive first.

13. Install Windows 7.

Posted: 03-23-2009

View 9 Replies!   View Related
Error 0xc00000e9 On Install - No Usb Drive
Was going to install win 7 64 bit on my dell D520 (Laptop) and i run into an error at system boot at (Windows is loading files...) The error code is 0xc00000e9 and there is no usb drive or anything like that in the laptop. The cd rom and Hard drive are practically brand new so that cant be it. Im thinking maybe its the 64 bit but im running a Intel core 2 duo 1.66 Ghz processor with 2 gigs of ram. Ive had the same error quite a few times now during reinstall.

Posted: Wednesday, May 06, 2009 9:01 PM

View 8 Replies!   View Related
Install From USB Flash Drive Fails
(I have searched but not found an answer; apologies if it is there and I did not find it.) I have copied the Windows 7 install DVD to a properly formatted flash drive and am able to boot from it.  I am installing to a Vista SP1 system without any CD/DVD drive. When the Setup program starts, I am only able to complete the very first screen (choose language, etc.)

The Setup program then halts with the following message box: "A required CD/DVD driver is missing. If you have a driver floppy disk [!] CD, or USB flash drive, please insert it now." After clicking OK, another boz appears "No device drivers were found. 

Make sure that the installation media contains the correct drivers, and then click OK."  Can then choose Browse or Rescan. Rescan just restarts the loop.  I have tried using Browse to navigate to the location of the USB and flash drive drivers, but they are not accepted.  I have also copied those drivers to the flash drive to no avail.

I have determined that Windows Vista thinks that I have the latest versions of the drivers. Only option left is to abort the setup program. At this point I'm stumped.  Anyone have a solution?

Posted: Tuesday, June 02, 2009 6:02 PM

View 7 Replies!   View Related
Driver Install For SanDisk USB Drive
I'm using a SanDisk Cruzier USB Drive and the driver won't install on Windows7.  Anyone else with the same problem or a solution as to how to get the driver to install because I so far have not been able to.

Posted: Friday, June 05, 2009 9:02 PM

View 4 Replies!   View Related
Install Win 7 From An Usb Key
I have an problem because this computer is an very old laptop, so i don´t have an dvdburner on this, so i downloaded windows 7 on an usb key.i have build a new computer, and i want to install windows 7 on that. Now my question is can i install windows 7 from the usb key , to the new computer.

Posted: Thursday, May 14, 2009 10:17 PM

View 5 Replies!   View Related
Guide Use A USB Key To Install Win 7
Putting the Windows 7 installation on a USB thumb drive has a few advantages—a small USB key is much more convenient for carrying around than a DVD, the OS will actually install much faster, and you can use a USB key to install Windows 7 on systems that do not have a DVD drive, such as a netbook. In fact, you can even install Windows 7 on netbooks that have fairly modest hardware.

Here’s a quick look at the process:

First, you’ll need the DiskPart utility on the system you will use to prep the thumb drive. This is a free disk partitioning utility that is likely already installed on your Windows system. If not, you can download DiskPart here Launch the DiskPart utility by typing diskpart at the Start Menu.

Then run the list disk command to check the status of your drive. Now run select disk 1 where the "1" is actually the corresponding number of your USB drive. Run clean. Once the thumb drive is clean, you can run create partition primary.

Now make the partition active by entering active Then you need to set up the file system as Fat32 by running format fs=fat32 quick (quick, of course, specifies that you want to perform a quick format to speed up the process).

Entering the assign command gives the USB drive a drive letter, making it easy to access from Windows Explorer Then you can copy everything from the Windows 7 installation DVD onto the USB key (a simple drag and drop will do).

Now you can insert the thumb drive into the system you want to install Windows 7 onto and boot the system. The installation will now proceed as usual—but faster.

Posted: 08-15-2009

View 5 Replies!   View Related
Install Win 7 To A USB Hard Disk
I'm trying to install Win 7 to a USB harddisk but I'm getting an error message saying that Win 7 can not be installed on a USB drive. Microsoft support people say it could be done, but they would not offer help. Has anyone an idea?

Posted: Sunday, January 10, 2010 8:16 PM

View 2 Replies!   View Related
Running Win 7 From A USB Drive
Is it possible to run Windows 7 from a USB Drive? (Disclamer: I am aware that you can install Windows 7 from a USB Drive and am not interested in this. I am only looking for ways to run it off the drive.) if this is not possible can anyone explain why so that i might be able to get around it? Basically i am trying to make something i can move from computer to computer with that is my setup.

Posted: Thursday, November 12, 2009 8:10 PM

View 3 Replies!   View Related
USB Devices Fail After Install Test Update For Win 7 RC
all of my Usb devices inc HDD, printer and Scanner are faile to start after installed UPDATE-KB970417.Devices can be recognized by system but there have no communication between PC and USB device.  and also, all usb-HDD are not able to active the write-caching policy.

Posted: Wednesday, May 13, 2009 8:35 AM

View 3 Replies!   View Related
Win 7 Wont Boot From Usb Drive
i just made an iso file of my windows 7 that i got with the student discount so i put it on my usb drive by following the instructions on these forums. Everything seemed to go fine, then i went into my bios and set up usb drive to boot first, but it just wont boot from the usb drive. I dont know why, the windows 7 iso file is definitely on the drive. Does anyone have any ideas?

Posted: 11-05-2009

View 4 Replies!   View Related
Can Win 7 Be Installed TO A USB Hard Drive ?
1. I have read through many threads here and have not truly found anything useful. The closest things I have found were installing to an internal disk as a VHD, and then migrating to a USB HDD and modifing some settings; or connecting the HDD via eSATA.DO YOU NOT THINK THAT PEOPLE MIGHT WANT TO INSTALL TO USB BECAUSE THEY DON'T HAVE THE ABILITY TO DO THE OBVIOUS!!

2. I have a netbook (Dell Mini9). I don't have eSATA, nor am I willing to spend the money on a large enough half mini-PCIe SSD to install via VHD. If my internal HDD was large enough to install one OS, then the VHD, I would either dual boot, or just install the OS on the internal drive.

3. The problem with the half mini-PCIe SSDs is that the Sequential Read/Write Access 40MB/sec / 15MB/sec respectively. With a 7200rpm USB drive, I should get about the same performance, slightly less on the read, but slightly better on the write, and balancing out the read/write times would make lag less noticeable.

4. If you answer the question with "it should theoretically install" or "it depends on your BIOS settings" or "just take out your internal hard drive" then you need to stop posting. If you have not tried to perform this task, then you probably don't have much of an informed opinion of this. We aren't looking for it should, we are looking HOW.

Please understand what the question is before posting. The question is "Can Windows 7 be installed TO a USB Hard Drive? If so, how?" There are plenty of posts on installing FROM a USB drive.

Posted: Saturday, June 27, 2009 5:34 AM

View 7 Replies!   View Related
Win 7 Rc Will Not Detect External USB Drive
Just installed the RC on my desktop, I've been using the Beta, after the install my external hard drive is not detected.  When I turn it on or plug the USB cable in, the RC tries to load drives for it, but it fails.  Any ideas?  I also tried to plug it into my laptop, I get an error message, (USB device is not recognized), and shows up as an unknown device in the USB root hub.

The laptop is a Fujitsu A1120, Vista Home Premium 64bit, 4GBRAM, 300GB hdd, Intel Core 2 Duo T6400.

The desktop is MSI K9A2 Neo-F, AMD Phenom 9950, 8GB RAM, 80GB & 500GB hdd's.

Posted: Wednesday, May 06, 2009 4:02 PM

View 12 Replies!   View Related
External USB HD - Win 7 Stops Communicating With Drive
I'm using the 64-bit version of Windows 7 RC1.  I have attached a 1 TB Seagate External HD via USB.  The drive has a green light that indicates when it is on and blinks when data is being transferred.  I've run into a problem where Windows seems to stop communicating with the drive.  This happens when there has been a period of inactivity but the PC or the drive has not hibernated.

For example, I loaded a spreadsheet (Excel 2007) from the USB drive and worked on it for roughly 1 hour.  The PC did not hibernate during that time nor was there an extended period of inactivity.  After working on the spreadsheet I clicked the Disk Icon to save the file.  Excel seemed to lock up and Not Responding appeared at the top of the screen.

I then tried to access the drive in other ways but I could not.  I tried accessing the Disk Management application and that seemed to hang.  All this time the green light on the USB drive was lit but it never blinked to indicate access.  As a last resort I unplugged the USB drive.  When I did, Excel responded with a disk full message and Disk Management Console began working.

I plugged the USB drive back in and everything returned to normal.  I was able to successfully save the spreadsheet to the USB drive.

Has anyone else experienced the problem?  It is almost like the drive goes to sleep and will not wake-up or that Windows stops communicating with the drive after a period of inactiviity.

Posted: Sunday, June 21, 2009 12:32 AM

View 4 Replies!   View Related
Win 7 Backup To Usb Connected Hard Drive
Will it be possible to direct a backup file to a folder on a USB connected hard drive? The RC backup as far as I can tell does not allow specifying a folder for writing back ups.

Posted: Monday, October 12, 2009 9:38 PM

View 4 Replies!   View Related
Win 7 Install On New Drive
I am purchasing an upgrade copy of Windows 7 and want to do a clean install on my Vista machine.  I want to purchase a second hard drive to install the new operating system for a "clean install" and use my old drive as as secondary drive.

I am not interested in running Vista from it, only the software installed on the old drive.  Can this be done?  If so, how?  I really would appreciate your help.  Both are serial drives.

Posted: Thursday, October 15, 2009 10:38 PM

View 4 Replies!   View Related
Win 7 Keeps On Reporting USB External Drive Missing Or Corrupt
My New pc with windows 7 Home Premium x64 is having Major issues with My Maxtor Basics 1Tb external drive.

this drive is working fine with any other PC I have tried it with so I am certain it is not an issue with the drive.

basically the only way, I can get my drive to be recognized is by power cycling it.

Once I have done this I am asked to run chkdsk and the drive works ok until either it goes into sleep mode or I reboot the PC.

once either of these things happen when I try to access the drive I get an error - usually drive in inaccessible but sometime I am asked to format.

When ever this happens if I power cycle the drive It can be seen again fine.

Hardware:

Packard Bell Imedia X4520 UK
3GB DDR Ram
Nvidia 7100/610i chipset.
Extenal drive Maxtor Basics 1TB Model 9Nz2D8-500

I have tried the latest 15.49 drivers for the Nvidia 7050/610i chipset

http://www.nvidia.com/object/nforce_vista_win7_64bit_15.49.html

and also tried the Hotfix for the data transfer issue and Nvidia Chipset from here:

http://support.microsoft.com/kb/976972

I have also tried deleting the usb drivers and the mass storage driver and allowing them to re-detect.

But none of these has resolved my issue. It looks like there is an issue with the usb mass storage driver waking the drive or acessing it for the first time on boot up.

Posted: Sunday, January 03, 2010 11:58 AM

View 7 Replies!   View Related
Cannot Boot From Drive With Win 7 Install
I recently bought a new hard drive to install windows 7 (C:), I previously had Vista64 installed on another hard drive (D:). Currently when I start up with the D: it will bring me to a boot screen with a choice of OS to use. I had installed windows 7 on the drive with the intention of formatting the Vista64 drive to use it as a storage drive.

It was recently brought to my attention that windows 7 installs the boot file on the first hard drive listed in the bios, in my case the D: I tried booting from the C: with the windows 7 install, and it does not boot.

I have tried booting the windows 7 disc and running the system tools, using the cmd prompt to run: bootrec /fixmbr bootrec /fixboot bootrec /rebuildbcd The first command works, but the second and third commands give me a message of "element not found" when I hit enter.

I also tried running the auto boot fix from the system tools, everything I have tried still doesn't allow me to boot from my C: I was hoping someone could help me solve this problem.

Posted: Friday, September 11, 2009 6:59 AM

View 9 Replies!   View Related
Win 7 Install On A Hitachi 1T Drive
OK, I have an ASUS P5k Pro with the latest BIOS installed with Window 7 Pro 64 BIT. I just bought 2 SATA 1T Hitachi drives (HDS7210CLA332). All sata drives are set o IDE in the BIOS.

At first I added the two drives to my existing Windows 7 installation and all seemed fine, but I did notice that it installed some sort of driver, but couldn't figure out what it was. The drives were recognized after I did a reboot. (The same thing happen in XP SP3 as well.)

I decided to install windows 7 on one of the new drives (after all it was newer and faster), I partition the harddrive to about 500 megs, formatted the partition using window 7 setup (booting up from the DVD), the OS installed, I then let Window 7 do the updates, was forced to reboot, I then get an error that it couldn't find a bootable drive on boot up.

So I reran windows setup tried recover to fix the drive, same error, so went to reinstall window 7 again, this time it told me it could not install the drive on the partion.

So, rebooted back with my original Win7 installation and all was fine with the drives as extra drives in my system.

Anyone have any ideas?

Posted: 01-22-2010 at 03:56:23 AM

View 5 Replies!   View Related
Install A Win 7 64-bit On D Drive
How does one install a new program (Windows 7 64-bit) on the D drive? Dell formatted the hard drive with a C and D partition, though by default everything goes to C. C is almost full, and D drive is in fact the larger of the two partitions. How does one install new programs to the D drive so as to not have C fill up?? I have Windows 7 64-bit, so doe I need two program folders on the D drive?? That is, one called "Program Files" and the other called "Programs Files (x86)"???

How do I make those folders on D?? On C Drive the folders in which programs are installed have SPECIAL permissions!!! Dell tech support will not answer this even though Dell sold me the laptop with two partitions of the hard drive. NO clue why Dell does that. Under Windows 7, the D drive is not labelled a Recovery Drive, and it is a bigger partition than the C Drive.

Posted: 01-23-2010 at 08:43:05 PM

View 5 Replies!   View Related
Copyright © 2005-08 www.BigResource.com, All rights reserved