It's much easier to do it with UltraISO.
You load the install DVD or an iso of the install DVD you may have downloaded into UltraISO. Then simply use the 'Bootable' menu option to 'Write Disk image...' and having set which drive your USB Key is, press 'Write'.
You can also check the box to 'Verify' your write.
You are effectively doing what you do when you burn an ISO to a DVD but in this case it's a one step operation to 'burn' a bootable USB key without having to format it, use the HP or MBR tool or Diskpart etc. You can overwrite a used key or do this on any new key.
And you can do it in XP, Vista or Win 7.
Hi there - I hardly ever leave posts anywhere, but I just wanted to say *thank you so much* for your easy to follow guide on making a bootable usb using xp. I searched for hours to find a method that wasn't totally incomprehensible due to the use of jargon that I don't understand. Thanks again, I really appreciate it.
You're very welcome, Yotam! I ran into the same issues when the beta was released, and I decided that I'd had enough, so I wrote one that I knew would work because I used it!
NTFS doesn't make the drive slow. It's a different filesystem, that's all, and it lets you put files larger than 4GB on the drive.
It will slow down a flash drive Snark. Most flash drives, due to the nature of the Nand, will find FAT32 the fastest/speediest. Now, if you can get it formatted NTFS with 32K blocks.. that should be close to the same speed.
Comments
Nice tutorial
Im gonna give this a go.
Thank you
How do I clear it and make commands with other drives?
"cd" is the command for change directory. It's what you need to switch to whatever location you're looking for.
You load the install DVD or an iso of the install DVD you may have downloaded into UltraISO. Then simply use the 'Bootable' menu option to 'Write Disk image...' and having set which drive your USB Key is, press 'Write'.
You can also check the box to 'Verify' your write.
You are effectively doing what you do when you burn an ISO to a DVD but in this case it's a one step operation to 'burn' a bootable USB key without having to format it, use the HP or MBR tool or Diskpart etc. You can overwrite a used key or do this on any new key.
And you can do it in XP, Vista or Win 7.
This method is free. So why would you pay $30 for something you can do for free with the above tools?
I get
Target volumes will be updated with BOOTMGR compatible bootcode.
Drive e: maps to volume \\?\Volume{910a560e-4b52-11de-b1ba-0016418aa708}.
This volume does not appear to connect to any disk partitions. Volume bootcode
is always unused in the absence of associated partitions.
any help would be great
when i try to do MBRwiz /disk=2 /active=1 (in my case it is 2) it gives an error "invalid partition selected".
please tell me what to do?
I heard this makes the drive slow.
Will formatting to Fat32 work?
ntfs loses big in sisoft, but it's only barely slower in other tests.