Backgrade to WinXP over Win7

Yes IMHO Way To Old for Win 7.

Look at the Motherboard manual for instruction on bring up the one time Boot menu. If you don't have the printed manual you can more then likely download a PDF of it from the MB manufacturers website.
 

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7 x64
Yes IMHO Way To Old for Win 7.

Look at the Motherboard manual for instruction on bring up the one time Boot menu. If you don't have the printed manual you can more then likely download a PDF of it from the MB manufacturers website.

I did not find the boot menu in user manual but finally ESC was OK.
There were 3 ways to boot - I chosen CD, and the result: HDD boot again (even if disabled at BIOS)
Why?
 

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Windows 7 Ultimate 32b
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Windows 7 Ultimate 32b
Not sure the Ultimate CD has a partitioning program on it. Try this one.
EaseUS Partition Master Home Edition - CNET Download.com

Then there is Partition Magic and there may be one listed in the tutorials on this forum.

The Ultimate CD does have partition programs but the tools I found in those are creating, deleting, splitting etc. partitions. It means they are simple programs and not contain formatting (or deleting data on system partition)?
 

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Windows 7 Ultimate 32b
If you are tapping the correct key given on first boot screen to boot the CD and it instead boots HD, do you get the prompt to "Press any key to boot disk?"

If not you'll need to burn another CD as it is not booting. WIll another bootable disk boot in the drive?
 
If you are tapping the correct key given on first boot screen to boot the CD and it instead boots HD, do you get the prompt to "Press any key to boot disk?"

If not you'll need to burn another CD as it is not booting. WIll another bootable disk boot in the drive?

No "press any key.." for me. Maybe ESC is not good for boot menu(?)

PowerISO shows it is bootable image.
Could it be a problem that the win xp .iso file name or the label not the one it should be?
 

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Windows 7 Ultimate 32b
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Windows 7 Ultimate 32b
Where did you get XP ISO? Try burning confirmed ISO with ImgBurn at 4x speed. If it is slipstreamed then it may be a corrupt ISO. Have you tried XP SP3 for your licensed version, using correct retail or OEM download?

Boot into BIOS setup tapping the key given for that on first boot screen. Set CD drive first to boot in BIOS boot order, then HDD. Save choices and Exit. How to Boot your Computer from a Bootable CD or DVD

If you don't get prompt to Press Any Key then it's not a good CD.
 
Where did you get XP ISO? Try burning confirmed ISO with ImgBurn at 4x speed. If it is slipstreamed then it may be a corrupt ISO. Have you tried XP SP3 for your licensed version, using correct retail or OEM download?

Boot into BIOS setup tapping the key given for that on first boot screen. Set CD drive first to boot in BIOS boot order, then HDD. Save choices and Exit. How to Boot your Computer from a Bootable CD or DVD

If you don't get prompt to Press Any Key then it's not a good CD.

It is XP Prof SP3. Got it from a friend. Not original, if you mean that.
Boot order was modified it's OK.

This "press any key" is a bit of mystery for me. I tell you what I did:
During boot (=verifying DMA or something... boot from CD...) I hit Esc and Easy Boot - 'Volkov Commander like' screen - came up with 3 choices. I set CD-ROM to boot and after that HDD booting as usual. If there is still a function key which makes the prompt "press..." then I don't know which one is that. Not found in user manual. I tried already Esc, F1, F2, F10, F11 (I know F8, it is for optional startup).
 

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Windows 7 Ultimate 32b
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Windows 7 Ultimate 32b
If ESC gave you a boot menu then why keep looking? If it's not working confirm that with the CD drive set first to boot.

Try booting into BIOS setup to set CD drive to boot first, as I just suggested.

If that fails to get the prompt to Press any key, then the problem is likely the CD. Try booting it in another PC.
 
Hello again,

I made a backup from F and merge 2 partitions for easier install of XP. My problem:
I boot from install CD (I got another one, last one was maybe wrong) and boot is ok, check hardware, copying files etc. OK. When it restarts in 15 seconds, after boot the process starts again from the very first steps. What should I do? I tried during reboot to change first boot item to HDD but error (OK, I was a bit naive..) Any suggestions?
Thanks
 

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Windows 7 Ultimate 32b
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Windows 7 Ultimate 32b
Does the XP installer see the HD at the screen where you select your partitions? If so delete the target partition, re-create and full format it to see if that helps. If not you'll need to slipstream the SATA driver to make it see the HD.
 
Does the XP installer see the HD at the screen where you select your partitions? If so delete the target partition, re-create and full format it to see if that helps. If not you'll need to slipstream the SATA driver to make it see the HD.

Yes, XP can see the HDD and the partitions. I made a format and NTFS system but a quick one. A full process could be better?
Is it a problem that the XP CD content is not one file (ISO) but the folders and files can be seen?
 

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Windows 7 Ultimate 32b
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Windows 7 Ultimate 32b
What's important there is that the ISO is intact, meets HASH, and is burned to CD properly with an image burner like ImgBurn
 
What's important there is that the ISO is intact, meets HASH, and is burned to CD properly with an image burner like ImgBurn

OK, so it means if I burn to ISO it wouldn't help.
Gregrocker, do you think that full format makes the install OK? I am asking because I am on a quick installed Linux at the moment and it would be very good not to install Linux again to have forum discussion.
OR: full format on the partition of XP is enough (leaving Linux on the other one)?
Thank you
 

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Windows 7 Ultimate 32b
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Windows 7 Ultimate 32b
I was referring to full format the XP partition before install.

I don't know how Linux will affect the XP install as it can present problems with Windows installs. You might ask in a Linux forum or look over these similar steps for Dual Boot - Windows 7 and Linux - Windows 7 Forums

Thank you!
Full format was the solution for XP install.
Now the partition of Linux (C?) is inactive, I hope it makes no harm if I make it active (or just simply should delete the content)
 

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Windows 7 Ultimate 32b
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Windows 7 Ultimate 32b
Why would you make another partition Active? Only the Windows OS partition should be marked Active. Leave it as it is.
 
Why would you make another partition Active? Only the Windows OS partition should be marked Active. Leave it as it is.

OK, but I can't see the other partition and I would like to use that for storage (now linux on that). Now I have a smaller HDD.
 

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Windows 7 Ultimate 32b
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Windows 7 Ultimate 32b
I don't know what is Disk MGMT map drive.
Now E: Windows XP, D: CD-ROM, C: USB key (if I connect it) and 2. partition (F?) is nowhere.
During XP install the other partition was made inactive (or whatever we call it)
 

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Windows 7 Ultimate 32b
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Windows 7 Ultimate 32b
Please post back a screenshot of your maximized Disk Management drive map and listings:

1. Type Disk Management in Start Search box.
2. Open Disk Mgmt. window and maximize it.
3. Type Snipping Tool in Start Search box.
4. Open Snipping Tool, choose Rectangular Snip, click New, draw a box around full drive map and all listings.
5, Save Snip, attach using paper clip in Reply Box.

Tell us what is on each partition.
 
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