How to boot windows vista from usb flash
All you would need is. Here the Diskpart utility is instructed to choose the disk 1 as the drive to be worked on. This command clears out all the information of the volumes, partitions, boot sectors and the MBR from the USB flash drive. This command will create a primary partition on the USB flash drive. This command instructs the Diskpart utility to select the newly created partition. This command will make the current partition primary active to enable the USB flash drive to boot from.
This command formats the selected drive partition using the FAT32 file system. This command assigns a drive letter to the newly formatted partition. As there is no drive letter specified in the command line, the next available drive letter is assigned to the drive. Follow the regular installation for Windows Vista. A high-speed flash drive would make a difference. Hi there colleagues, its impressive post concerning tutoringand entirely explained, keep it up all the time.
How can I make the disk bootable? Now that Win7 is out, why would you bother with Vista? Name required. With this article and a bit of fiddling myself I was able to make active the inactive bootable Vista partition on my HDD. One clarification I would like to make to your article is that I had to boot a XP machine with the Vista installation disk, in order to get to a Vista command prompt and run diskpart in there.
Apart from that, I did everything else as described above. VoldEMorT may be after step open cmd and type diskpart, you can type disk list to see which is your usb drive..
VoldEMorT may be after step open cmd and type diskpart, you can type list disk to see which is your usb drive.. I think I saw the same thing the first couple of times I tried to make a USB HDD bootable, and I think I solved it by doing a complete reformat of the drive in partition commander or something like that.
I have seen that some USB drives are harder to find in diskpart. If I remember correctly was a while ago I did this what I did was to go into some partitioning program and remove all the partitions on the USB drive and then add a new one that was active and format it to NTFS.
I had to go to the manufactorers website and download a program from them to be able to reformat it so that it was usable again. So it should be completely possible to follow this guide without having to get into the vista version of diskpart.
But if you can use it, the vista version has a few more posibilities that could make the process a bit quicker. Fat32 will work just fine. I only had some trouble getting Bootsect to fix the bootsector of a fat32 drive to be able to use bootmgr to boot with. If you only use the usb drive on windows computers it can actaully be smarter to have it in ntfs because of native disk compression and being able to save larger files.
Hit this link boys just installed windows xp home sp2 from colby mp3 player 1gig. It has all the programs you need and links to them Going to try vista which its supposed to do Tuesday will let you know.
LOL who would a thunk it. NTFS is the best part of this method. Some USB drives are set up with different partitions than others when you buy them. You answered. I was just going to say I would ask my brother ;o Get your Gravatar registered bro! Help please. I was stuck without step 5 for far too long. Lo and behold, when i try to boot off of it, it failed. Is this method still applicable only in Vista systems?
Or can I do it in an XP system? This solution can be used for vista, windows server and windows 7. So I had to find an old 1gb drive to get it working. After a bit of web sleuthing, I finally found a working solution. Now we are happily running Server […].
Wow, thanks so much for posting this. The best step by step process for installing Vista on a USB for installation. Mine is working as we speak. I just wanted to comment and say thanks!
Damn, this sounds legit. Thanks for the post. Knew this could be done.