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I have another question, I have a blu-ray drive and would rather buy some blu-ray discs to burn it on can I still do this?
I have another question, I have a blu-ray drive and would rather buy some blu-ray discs to burn it on can I still do this?
There is no point in wasting an expensive BluRay disk for 4GB when it can hold 25GB min.
A DVD is much more reliable anyhow.
Ah okay, thank you. Maybe one more question and I know I'm milking it, but do I use the media refresh downloads? Or maybe the one's that have the letter U in them? I don't know which .iso I should use.
Yes, you need the media refresh downloads - they prevent issues with certain hardware configurations.
The actuall download you want is this one.... http://msft.digitalrivercontent.net/win/X17-58997.iso (Windows 7 Home Premium x64 SP1 U (media refresh))
Lol I'm back for a few more questions, I know, I know... I just want to make sure I don't screw up something.
Now the burn disc worked like a charm and I'm at the Install Windows screen and I see two partition's, one of system, and the other is primary. I'm assuming I must delete the primary partition 2 that has the 931.4gb on it? Just to refresh everyone's memory I have an OEM OS of Windows 7 and I want to turn it to 64bit from 32bit so I'm doing a clean install.
You will need to delete both partitions - neither can survive the switch from 32-bit to 64-bit.
Look here for the tutorial Clean Install Windows 7
To make sure I'm reading this right just use the drive options and click delete on both partitions and install on the unallocated one that pops up?
Yep - the system will automatically create a new System Reserved partition of around 100MB, and the main (C: drive) partition, whihc will be the rest of the disk
If you want to prevent the creation of the (invisible to Windows) System Reserved partition, you will need to create partitions to fill the disk before continuing the install.
This forces Windows to put the boot data into the normal Windows partition.
Okay the install got to like 21% and gave me a corrupt file error and an error code saying error code 0x80070570. Is it likely that my disc is corrupt that I just burned?
Hi Aaron,
Perhaps the disc was an issue - try another one, but this time burn it at 4x speed, no faster than that. If you still get those problems, try this technique using a USB thumb drive instead:
Use this tool to make a bootable USB (must be 4GB in size) using the ISO you downloaded:
Universal USB Installer – Easy as 1 2 3 | USB Pen Drive Linux
Ensure that the PC can boot from a USB drive by checking that in the BIOS settings. Insert the USB, turn on the computer, and it will boot from the USB drive. Now install Windows 7 as normal.
Let us know how you get on.
Regards,
Golden
Last edited by Golden; 22 Jun 2012 at 09:04. Reason: add USB option as alternative to DVD burn