Unable to make thumb drive bootable

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  1. Posts : 3
    windows 7 home x64
       #1

    Unable to make thumb drive bootable


    I just recently bought a new motherboard (old one died), and didn't realize that it had no IDE port on it for easy Win7 re-installation (my only available dvd drive is still IDE). After trying to find a friend with one, I ended up trying to make a bootable thumb drive using the Windows 7 bootable USB drive utility and my father's computer, and every single time I've tried to do it, it gives an error right at the end about bootsect.exe saying it isn't bootable. Any suggestions?

    Asus P5QL-VM, Intel Core 2 Duo q9300, 4gb (2x2gb) ram, seagate SATA hard drive of some sort, GEForce 9800GTX+ gpu.
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 589
    Windows 7 ultimate X64
       #2

    Kaljaen said:
    I just recently bought a new motherboard (old one died), and didn't realize that it had no IDE port on it for easy Win7 re-installation (my only available dvd drive is still IDE). After trying to find a friend with one, I ended up trying to make a bootable thumb drive using the Windows 7 bootable USB drive utility and my father's computer, and every single time I've tried to do it, it gives an error right at the end about bootsect.exe saying it isn't bootable. Any suggestions?

    Asus P5QL-VM, Intel Core 2 Duo q9300, 4gb (2x2gb) ram, seagate SATA hard drive of some sort, GEForce 9800GTX+ gpu.

    Hi Kaliaen,
    Assuming that you already formatted your flash drive, it is set as "active",
    you'll need to use either powerISO or similar program for copying boot files or use the bootsect utility that comes on the Windows 7 disk to make the flash drive bootable.
    Open command promt:

    1. Insert your Windows 7 DVD into your drive.
    2. Change directory to the DVD’s boot directory where bootsect lives:
      d:
      cd d:\boot
    3. Use bootsect to set the USB as a bootable NTFS drive prepared for a Win 7 image. I’m assuming that your USB flash drive has been labeled disk G:\ by the computer:
      bootsect /nt60 g:

    The easiest way is to use Windows explorer to copy all of the files on your DVD on to the formatted flash drive. After you’ve copied all of the files the disk you are ready to go.
    Never had an issue using this method.
    Oh, and be sure to set your bios boot priority and make sure you have boot from flash drive enabled.
    Let me know if this helps you.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 9,606
    Win7 Enterprise, Win7 x86 (Ult 7600), Win7 x64 Ult 7600, TechNet RTM on AMD x64 (2.8Ghz)
       #3

    You need a 4gb flash drive or larger

    That's how I do it and I think it's the easiest and fastest way :
    USB Windows 7 Installation Key Drive - Create
    Step 1. Format the USB Flash Disk


    Run CMD (elevated) and type:
    diskpart
    list disk (*now find your USB disk number, you'll find it by its size)
    select disk 1 (*if your USB is disk 1)
    clean
    create partition primary
    select partition 1 (*this is 1, no matter what number is your USB disk)
    active
    format fs=fat32 (or ntfs, works with both)
    assign
    exit
    Note: Don't type the things in parentheses above!!
    Step 2. Copy Windows 7 or Vista's DVD content to the Flash Disk



    Still on CMD, assuming your dvd is drive d: and your usb is drive e:
    xcopy d:\*.* /s/e/f e:\
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  4. Posts : 589
    Windows 7 ultimate X64
       #4

    You need a 4gb flash drive or larger
    That too...
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  5.    #5

    If the other methods don't work for you, the one I've found which always works for me is to install Ultra ISO, on File tab open ISO, on Bootable tab Write Disk Image, Format, Write.
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  6. Posts : 8,383
    Windows 10 Pro x64, Arch Linux
       #6
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  7. Posts : 3
    windows 7 home x64
    Thread Starter
       #7

    @Dreem - I can't do that, I have no (working) DVD drive available to me. I'm currently using a barely functioning PC that is more or less only capable of browsing text-heavy websites.

    @DocBrown - Any time I do that from my current machine (which is running XP), it doesn't see the flash drive in the disk list.

    @Greg - I'll give that a shot, never tried using UltraISO before.

    EDIT - For clarity, I'm currently on WinXP 32bit, and I was reading that the cause of my problems has something to do with the bootsect that I'm trying to put onto the flash drive being 64bit under the 32bit OS - Can anyone shed some light on that?
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 9,606
    Win7 Enterprise, Win7 x86 (Ult 7600), Win7 x64 Ult 7600, TechNet RTM on AMD x64 (2.8Ghz)
       #8

    [QUOTE=Kaljaen;1118640]@Dreem - I can't do that, I have no (working) DVD drive available to me. I'm currently using a barely functioning PC that is more or less only capable of browsing text-heavy websites.

    @DocBrown - Any time I do that from my current machine (which is running XP), it doesn't see the flash drive in the disk list.

    @Greg - I'll give that a shot, never tried using UltraISO before.

    EDIT - For clarity, I'm currently on WinXP 32bit, and I was reading that the cause of my problems has something to do with the bootsect that I'm trying to put onto the flash drive being 64bit under the 32bit OS - Can anyone shed some light on that?[/QUOTE]


    Yes, I have read you have to make a 64bit win7 flash on a 64 bit computer
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 3
    windows 7 home x64
    Thread Starter
       #9

    DocBrown said:

    Yes, I have read you have to make a 64bit win7 flash on a 64 bit computer
    Yeah, that's what I saw, rather unfortunate for me.
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 9,606
    Win7 Enterprise, Win7 x86 (Ult 7600), Win7 x64 Ult 7600, TechNet RTM on AMD x64 (2.8Ghz)
       #10

    Do you have any friends with a portable USB DVD drive or anybody with a 64 bit computer ?
      My Computer


 
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