![]() Simply type the build number into the search box, select the version you want (圆4, x86 or arm64) and then follow the prompts til you you get to the Create download package button.Įxtract the contents of the download to a “known” directory and then run the appropriate script for the version you downloaded (i.e. Using an aria2 script downloaded from UUP dump. Step 10: I can put whatever I want for the volume label, right? ![]() Is that going to be a problem? What’s in your source folder for the ‘install.xxx’ file?ĥ. Step 8: is the source folder in order? It does not have a ‘install.wim’ file. ‘Developer ID’ is ‘Microsoft Corporation’ ?į: ‘Sectors to Load’ is ‘8’ since I am building a Windows 10 OS installation disc, right?Ĥ. boot image is: source is the iso file on the desktop pointing to “boot\” ? That file is there in the desktop iso file.ĭ. Step 6 for you: (directions in the Guide are for Vista, but I am working with Windows 10).ī. Or does ‘bootable’ mean something different than this?ģ. Step 5: when a Bootable disc is made, does that mean that when I use the disc later, there will be a setup.exe file to click on to make it start running? I ask because there’s a setup.exe file now in the iso file on the Desktop and in other burned DVDs I’ve made, there’s a setup.exe file there, too. Step 4: my source would be the location of the iso file on my desktop?Ģ. I can make the substitutions where needed, I think, but I have a few questions:ġ. I’ve looked at Guide for How to create an installation disc using ImgBurn. I’ll try ImgBurn with one and if that doesn’t work, I’ll try it with the other writer. I have two DVD writers: Dell USB Slim DVD Drive (DW316) and LG 8x External USB Double-Layer DVD±RW/CD-RW Drive. My stack of DL DVD discs came from Staples and I’ve used discs from the stack in the past for DVD burning - the last one was in 2021 for 20H2, though. ![]() ![]() Which would answer my question of why I can’t get a DVD disk burned. If not, then there’s likely a problem with the quality of the DVD discs. I might try ImgBurn just to see if it can complete the verification step. …it still works just fine for all my CD’s, DVD’s (including Dual Layer DVD’s)… Does that fit your “create a bootable USB” category? I have, however, created a Recovery Drive on a USB stick using the Recovery Drive app that is on the PC. There is no facility to make a bootable USB there. I use Backup and Restore (Windows 7) that is on my Win10 22H2 PC for my backups and image creation. How does one do that? When burned to a USB stick, do the contents look like the contents on a disk - a sources folder, a support folder, a boot folder, an efi folder, a bootmgr file, a bootmgr.efi file, an autorun.inf file and a setup.exe file? And it works just like a DVD - at This PC under ‘devices and drives’, I right-click on the item listed as the ‘drive’, select ‘open’ to see the contents, and then click on the setup.exe to run the installation stick?Ĥ. I know how to burn an iso file to a DVD, but I don’t know how to burn an iso file to a USB stick. I have the iso file backed up on an external driveģ. These days I use a USB stick instead of DVDs. This topic was modified 4 months ago by WCHS. What is the next step here to get something I can squirrel away? So, I am wondering if I could/should use the DVD without its having been verified after it was burned, if/when I should need to re-install 22H2? This is supposed to be the size for 22H2. Now, the 3 CDs that were burned have the 4.47 GB of data on them after the burning. Or is it? Could this be hanging up CDBurnerXP? So, it seems that the iso file itself is OK. The MediaCreation Tool went through a verification step after it downloaded Windows 10 and before it created the iso file. Could there be a problem with CD BurnerXP (it comes recommended by some users here on AskWoody)? I don’t think the DVDs themselves are the problem, because I’ve burned DVDs from the stack I have many times before. So, I am guessing the USB DVD writer is not the problem, since both the old one and the new one are encountering the same problem. ![]() The same thing happened with the new one it completes the burning and closes the disk, but runs into a problem when it moves on to the verification step. I thought there was a problem with the USB DVD writer, so I bought a new one. I tried 3 times, each time with a new DL DVD. CDBurnerXP completed the burning and closed the disk, but it would not complete the verification step. Tonight, I tried to burn a bootable DVD for 22H2. And then I burn a bootable DVD, using CDBurnerXP, a program recommended by a number of AskWoody members. I’ve always used Woody’s Squirrel-away instructions for making an iso file of Windows 10. ![]()
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