Solved Windows 7 Repair Disk Reformatting

evanscott815

New member
Hello!
I recently had some issues with my wimpy work laptop, and they were quickly resolved by making a repair disk with my gaming rig.
However, when I tried to reformat the disk, it seems to be read-only and only formattable to some weird file system.
Is this purposeful? Are these disks forever repair disks?
I guess it might be useful to have one lying around, but I would like to recycle the disk.
Thanks,
Evan
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom Build
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium x64
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia GTX 550Ti
Browser
Torch
How are you trying to reformat the disk? Normally you would do this during the Windows 7 install process.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Lenovo IdeaCenter 450
OS
Windows 10 Pro X64
CPU
Intel Quad Core i7-4770 @ 3.4Ghz
Memory
16.0GB PC3-12800 DDR3 SDRAM 1600 MHz
Graphics Card(s)
Intel Integrated HD Graphics
Sound Card
Realtek HD Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
HP 22" LCD
Screen Resolution
1680 x 1050
Hard Drives
250GB Samsung EVO SATA-3 SSD
2TB Seagate ST2000DM001 SATA-2
1.5TB Seagate ST3150041AS SATA
Keyboard
Dell USB
Mouse
Lenovo USB
Internet Speed
Cable via Road Runner 3MB Upload, 30MB Download
Antivirus
Windows Defender, MBAM Pro, MBAE
Browser
Seamonkey
Other Info
UEFI/GPT
PLDS DVD-RW DH16AERSH
How are you trying to reformat the disk? Normally you would do this during the Windows 7 install process.

I created the disk using the "Create Repair Disk" option on the Backup menu.
Capture.PNG

I have successfully repaired my computer, so there's no reason to keep the repair disk.

EDIT: Wow, I'm mentally hitting myself. It's a DVD-R, so I can't reformat.
Argh, I thought I grabbed a -RW. D'oh well.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom Build
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium x64
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia GTX 550Ti
Browser
Torch
You do not use a Repair CD to reformat and reinstall Win7. You use a DVD burned with the ISO image file of your licensed version, which I provided you in the blue link above.

During install, delete all partitions to Create and Format New ones as you wish. See Steps 6/7 here for illustration: Clean Install Windows 7
 
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