Ubcd4win Windows 7 .iso
. Create a folder on your hard drive called C: XPCD and copy the entire contents of your Windows XP CD to this folder. Download and run the UBCD4WINV360.exe file. Accept the defaults so that a C: UBCD4WIN folder is created. If UBCD4WIN runs - Cancel it.
Hello everyone, I deed download yesterday the UBCD4WIN v.3.6.0, to create an ISO Windows XP bootable CD with my original XP Setup CD. I can explain exactly how.
Then right-click on the UBCD4Win shortcut - Properties - Compatibility Mode - check the Compatibility mode for Windows XP (SP3) box. This should fix the PreLogon error (see below) when using Vista/Windows 7 systems. Do not allow it to search for your XP files (say 'No') and then set the Builder Source path to C: XPCD. Set the Media output to 'Create ISO image' by clicking the radio button as shown below.
You will get this PreLogon error if you have used a Windows Vista/7 system to prepare the USB drive. To fix this problem before you find it: Create a folder on your USB drive under MININT called Registration (i.e. MININT Registration) Copy the file C: Windows Registration R01.clb from your Windows Vista/7 hard disk to make the file MININT Registration R01.clb on your USB drive. Note: Jim Nealand reported that he only had R05.clb and R06.clb files, so he copied these and it fixed the problem, so maybe just copying all of these will work? Tip: to avoid having to do this in future, create a MININT Registration folder under the folder PEtoUSB which is located under the RMPrepUSB installation folder (press F3 in RMPrepUSB to find it) and copy the R01.clb file from your hard disk into that folder - e.g. If you installed RMPrepUSB.exe to C: RMPrepUSB then place the file at C: RMPrepUSB PEtoUSB MININT Registration R01.clb. This means that whenever you make a new USB drive using RMPrepUSB and tick the BartPE-USB checkbox, the R01.clb file will automatically be copied over.
Ubcd4win Windows 10 64 Bit
( Optional) - if you wish to use this USB drive to boot other operating systems or images in addition to UBCD4WIN by adding them to the USB drive at a later date, you can also install grub4dos by simply clicking on the ' Install grub4dos' button in RMPrepUSB - say 'Yes' to copy over the grldr file. Note that a menu.lst menu file is already present on the USB drive!. Click on the Eject button and go test your new bootable drive! Error: ISO is not made. Blue Screen of Death 0x0000007B error If you get this error when booting from some PCs (e.g. Dell PC or Acer TravelMate laptop) using any XP based USB bootable drive, the problem is usually caused by the WinPE/BartPE OS not being able to access the files on the USB drive.
This is usually because of one of two reasons: 1. The version of NTDETECT.COM you are using is resetting the USB controller and thus the USB drive is no longer present. This may well be the problem if UBCD boots when emulated under QEMU but not on some real systems. You do not have the correct Mass Storage Drivers present in your XP/BartPE image files and so it cannot detect the USB drive when it switches to protected mode. FIXES: 2a: Try changing the BIOS Menu Hard Disk access mode from 'Enhanced - AHCI' to 'Legacy' or 'Compatible' (mainly a fix for non-USB drive booting though!) 2b: Add mass storage drivers to your XP installation (UBCD4Win v3.60 does this automatically when you use the default build) 2c: Load the XP/BartPE ISO file into a ramdrive and use firadisk.gz. This requires more RAM but avoids the mass storage driver problems - though you may not be able to access all hard drives or USB drives in your system once you have booted to BartPE. See Part 3 below for details.
Download firadisk.gz from the section of this website. Copy firadisk.gz to the root of your multiboot USB drive. Copy the iso file from C: UBCD4WIN UBCD4WinBuilder.iso to the root of your USB multiboot drive. Add the following menu item to your existing menu.lst file: title UBCD4WIN from ISO file using firadisk find -set-root -ignore-floppies -ignore-cd /UBCD4WinBuilder.iso map -mem /firadisk.gz (fd0) map -mem /UBCD4WinBuilder.iso (0xff) map -hook root (0xff) chainloader (0xff). Now go try it! Note; this may not work on later versions of UBCD4Win!
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Other benefits of registering an account are subscribing to topics and forums, creating a blog, and having no ads shown anywhere on the site. Or read our to learn how to use this site. I used the DriveImage XML to create drive images last night. My hard drive is partitioned into 2 partitions. C: This is the main drive and shows 584 GB total capacity.
It seemed to create an image file o.k. Which is about 113 GB on the USB drive where I stored the backup file. D: This is a 12 GB partition labeled FACTORY IMAGE and created an image file of about 10 GB. DriveImage at first complained about not being able to create a shadow but went ahead and created a backup file after I cleared the warning box. I'm seriously in doubt of the likelihood that this image file will be worth anything; probably don't need it much anyway since it is some kind of an HP recovery image?
After untold hours of trying all that I know to try I conclude that it just isn't possible to make the necessary boot CD that would be required to work with the backed up DriveImage XML image files in case of a hard drive failure on my Windows 7 computer. I even tried to build a boot CD with an old Windows XP Professional original OEM disk that I have and it failed also; said that it was the wrong version of XP.
I've uninstalled/deleted everything that I installed for the DriveImage XML project and will try to go some other route. I found a really good, free download program that works well with Windows 7 (either 32-bit or 64-bit). It is called EASEUS Todo Backup 1.1 and can be downloaded from CNET (as I did) or directly from.
I made an image backup of my entire C: drive and then performed a check on the backed up file and everything went smoothly. I was able to make a self-booting CD with the program in about 5 minutes. I then booted my computer from the CD and it came up flawlessly with the EASEUS program ready to restore from the backed up image to the internal hard drive. I haven't gotten the nerve to actually restore from the backup to my hard drive but assume (hope?) that it would work o.k.
I am going to consider this topic closed from my point of view unless someone decides to ask a question. Edited by budinmissouri, 29 September 2010 - 09:28 AM.