Make Win7 Usb Install
Click the Windows START button, and click WINDOWS USB/DVD DOWNLOAD TOOL in the ALL PROGRAMS list to open the Windows USB/DVD Download Tool. In the SOURCE FILE box, type the name and path of your Windows ISO file, or click BROWSE and select the file from the OPEN dialog box.
I'm trying to use the Windows 7 USB/DVD Download Tool from the Microsoft Store to make my new 16 GB USB Flash drive bootable to install Windows. It worked the first time that I did this (for Windows 7 Pro 32-bit), but now it keeps failing at the end. (I'm trying to make it bootable with the Windows 7 Pro 64-bit installation DVD ISO.) I've tried to do this on two different computers (Windows XP Pro 32-bit & Windows 7 Pro 32-bit) with the same error:
Files copied successfully. However, we were unable to run bootsect to make the USB device bootable. If you need assistance with bootsect, please click the 'Online Help' link above for more information.
Clicking the link just takes me to the Microsoft store homepage, and a search for bootsect
from there yields no search results. I've tried to burn a DVD twice using Sonic RecordNow!, but even though it finishes without 'errors,' the disk is unreadable. :( Does anyone know why this keeps failing and how I may fix it?
7 Answers
It would seem that bootsect
was failing because the device was already bootable.
This morning I decided to try using it to boot with the Windows 7 Professional 64-bit installer image loaded on it, despite the failure, just to see what would happen. Surprise-surprise, it worked. -_-
Jim FellJim FellWarning: This will erase all data on this USB stick.
Launch a command prompt with admin rights and run the diskpart tool:
The “list disk” command will show you the connected drives and with “select disk”, you can choose your USB stick. Be careful to select the right drive or else your day won’t have a happy end. The crucial step here is the “clean” command. It overwrites the MBR and the partition table (thereby, deleting everything on the stick).
Ahmed GhoneimAhmed GhoneimI was trying to create Win7x64 bootable USB stick. Using WinXPx32 SP3, the tool failed for me as described. Luckily, I was able to get access to a Win7x64 machine instead, and there it worked just fine.
Usb Drive Installer
k0pernikusk0pernikushttp://www.kossboss.com/windows64from32 Copy the bootsect.exe into the folder Windows 7 USB DVD Download Tool is installed on and it should work.
The following description is taken from the tool's online help:
When creating a bootable USB device, I am getting an error about bootsect
To make the USB device bootable, you need to run a tool named bootsect.exe. In some cases, this tool needs to be downloaded from your Microsoft Store account. This may happen if you're trying to create a 64-bit bootable USB device from a 32-bit version of Windows. To download bootsect:
Login to your Microsoft Store account to view your purchase history
Look for your Windows 7 purchase.
Next to Windows 7, there is an 'Additional download options' drop-down menu.
In the drop-down menu, select '32-bit ISO.'
Right-click the link, and then save the bootsect.exe file to the location where you installed the Windows 7 USB/DVD Download Tool (e.g.
%UserProfile%AppDataLocalAppsWindows 7 USB DVD Download Tool
).Once the file has been saved, go back to the Windows 7 USB/DVD Download tool to create your bootable USB device.
Archive.org link: https://web.archive.org/web/20130130224114/http://www.sevenforums.com/attachments/installation-setup/47060d1263222191-32-bit-bootsect-bootsect7600x86.zip
bertiebTry to format (FAT32) your USB drive but not using quick option !
You can then check again (using explorer or chkdsk) to see if all sectors are readable.After formating (from Windows 7) the USB drive will have proper Windows 7 MBR and PBR. Shin ryu ga gotoku.
Never had problems with Windows 7 USB/DVD Download Tool.
Help for bootsect.exe - http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc749177(v=ws.10).aspx
snayobsnayobI had this issue when trying to create a bootable Windows 7 USB stick for an older laptop (Thinkpad T410).
Even with this warning, it still should boot as far as I understand, but the reason it didn't for me was because I had an older BIOS, so what I ended up doing was using the Rufus USB tool with the following settings:
Notice the 'Partition scheme' and 'Target system'.
I guess the Windows USB tool assumes UEFI and uses the wrong partition scheme? I don't really know, but this worked for me.
protected by Community♦May 16 '14 at 13:42
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