Jump to content
xisto Community
mm22

How To Make A Windows Installation Disk Bootable if for some reason it is not

Recommended Posts

Most of the CDs containing operating systems like Windows XP are bootable, which means you can insert them into your machine, restart your computer and the OS will start installing or ask you what to do. This is very convenient and crucial if the system has no other OS installed or it is corrupted and needs to be reinstalled.

For some reason some of the CDs I have used over time are not bootable. They still contain all of the installation files but the PC will not boot off them. This is a simple method to turn a non-bootable WinXP cd into a bootable WinXP cd.

Please note: There are methods for creating an installation disk "from scratch" if your system did not come with one, but this is not the scope of this little tutorial. In this case we assume we already have a Windows XP (may work with other versions) CD.

You will need to get the boot sector files, which you can get from here http://www.nu2.nu/download.php?sFile=wxp10.zip Open the zip and browse to cds\winxppro\files (or cds\winxphome\files), copy w2ksect.bin to C:\ (you can copy to another location but in that case you will need to adjust some parameter).

Copy all the files on your non-bootable CD to one folder, for example C:\winxpinst (if you have more than one cd/dvd drive you don't need to do this, you can copy straight from the second cd drive).

Download and install ImgBurn (http://www.imgburn.com/) which is a free utility to burn files/images to CD. We will now create a script to be imported in ImgBurn, to do so open a text editor (e.g. Notepad) and paste the following

IBB[START_BACKUP_OPTIONS]BuildMode=1Destination=0TestMode=0Verify=1WriteSpeed=0Copies=0FileSystem=1PreserveFullPathnames=0RecurseSubdirectories=1IncludeHiddenFiles=1IncludeSystemFiles=1IncludeArchiveFilesOnly=0AddToWriteQueueWhenDone=0ClearArchiveAttribute=0VolumeLabel_ISO9660=VRMHOEM_ENVolumeLabel_Joliet=VolumeLabel_UDF=Identifier_System=Identifier_VolumeSet=Identifier_Publisher=Identifier_Preparer=Identifier_Application=Dates_FolderFileType=0Restrictions_ISO9660_InterchangeLevel=0Restrictions_ISO9660_AllowMoreThan8DirectoryLevels=1Restrictions_ISO9660_AllowMoreThan255CharactersInPath=1Restrictions_ISO9660_AllowFilesWithoutExtensions=1Restrictions_ISO9660_AllowFullASCIICharacterSet=1Restrictions_ISO9660_DontAddVersionNumberToFiles=1Restrictions_Joliet_InterchangeLevel=1Restrictions_Joliet_AllowFilesWithoutExtensions=1Restrictions_Joliet_AddVersionNumberToFiles=0BootableDisc_MakeImageBootable=1BootableDisc_MediaEmulationType=0BootableDisc_BootImageFile=C:\w2ksect.binBootableDisc_DeveloperIdentifier=BootableDisc_LoadSegment=07C0BootableDisc_LoadSectorCount=4[END_BACKUP_OPTIONS][START_BACKUP_LIST]C:\winxpinst[END_BACKUP_LIST]

Be sure to change
BootableDisc_BootImageFile=C:\w2ksect.bin
and
[START_BACKUP_LIST]C:\winxpinst

to the locations where you copied the w2ksect.bin file and you stored the Windows installation files (can be the cd drive letter if you are using two cd drives). Then save the file as some-name.ibb (important, make sure windows does not add a txt extension to the file name).

If you have installed ImgBurn you can double-click this file and the program will open with the right configuration. At this point you only have to hit "Burn" or similar command in the program and the bootable cd will be created. The installation files will also be copied to the cd.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
dvd vs usbHow To Make A Windows Installation Disk Bootable

thank you; I love scripts so much more than gui even in windows.

How to adjust script if need to write to USB instead of DVD?

Cheers-reply by marker

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Guidelines | We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.