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#51
Reset UEFI/BIOS to default and still got the same issue.
I will sort one out tomorrow its late now.
But thank you guys, your help is much appreciated. I will let update thread when I get an ex hd
He wants to get rid of bloatware.
The driver prompt almost always means a bad USB installer, and never means it actually needs any SATA driver.
If you want to install in UEFI mode you need to create UEFI Bootable USB Flash Drive - Create in Windows
Then again you must follow the steps for UEFI (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface) - Install Windows 7 with - Windows 7 Forums
If you want to avoid UEFI for now and install normally to an MBR disk here are steps which always work to Bypass UEFI to Install WIn7. If you still get the driver prompt I'd use UltraISO Software To Create Bootable USB Flash Drive as it always works when the others don't.
Then follow the steps to get a perfect Clean Reinstall - Factory OEM Windows 7
Last edited by theog; 16 Mar 2013 at 07:22.
As Theog always says, make your Recovery disks.
Then you may have to delete the Recovery partition, and a backup image should never be stored on the same HD as it defeats the purpose of having it in case of HD failure.
Yes I know it is quite pointless having a backups on the same HD but sadley with 1 hard drive and no big enough ex hd as of yet. Catch 22.
Working on get one today then will get on with it :)
You can also back up your files to the web, using the same freeware and Skydrive to sync, access online and store to the cloud: Sync, Backup and Store your Files to the Cloud with Skydrive - Windows 7 Forums
If you don't have a DVD-ROM in your notebook, then you can use an external USB 2.0 DVD-ROM and put the Windows 7 DVD-ROM there. Any Windows 7 DVD-ROM of the same Windows 7 version (eg Home Premium 32-bit or 64-bit) will do, all you need is the serial from the sticker under your notebook. So you plug the USB DVD-ROM in a USB 2.0 port and a USB Flash drive with the SATA/RAID driver in another. Alternatively, you can create a Windows 7 installation USB Flash drive using Microsoft's Windows 7 USB DVD Download Tool (Google it). When at the point of selecting the installation partition, use the advanced tools options and browse to the USB Flash drive folder where you copied the SATA/RAID driver. Usually are the files you would use to create the Floppy (in Windows XP installation you are only allowed to load drivers from a floppy disk, pressing F6 when prompted), I'm not sure if you can use Windows drivers that would use to install the controller in Windows. Anyway, after the SATA/RAID driver is loaded, Windows 7 Setup will automatically see your hard disk and make its partitions available to choose for installation. Select the partition you want and proceed as normal.
Everything you need is provided and explained in Clean Reinstall - Factory OEM Windows 7