It is advised to change the Partition Scheme from FAT32 to NTFS. FAT32 has the advantage that it can pass through Secure Boot, which Windows 7 cannot do anyway. NTFS can support file sizes >4 GB and your install.wim may be >4 GB if you follow my instructions to perform a slipstream.
Win 7 Oem En X86 X64 48in1 Rar File
It is highly advised to create an Updates folder on your Bootable USB and to download and place the following updates in it. Also make a text file in this folder and copy the information below so you know what order to install the updates in. Installing these updates immediately after Windows 7 will save you Windows Update hassles due to your installation media being >7 years out of date and embedded with Internet Explorer 8 which is no longer supported.
I have put together the OEM Cert Collection along with an associated 2 line script to install the Cert and Apply the associated OEM SLP Key. After Installation copy the OEM folder containing the cert and OEM SLP key to your C:\ Drive and then run the script file.
Amy ensure you backup the SLP Activation of each install using the ABR program before clean installation see here: -clean-install-of-windows-7/microsoft-product-activation/the-activation-backup-and-recovery-program-windows-7-version/This will save a lot of hassles with Microsoft Product Activation in particular if the COA is faded. I only have the Dell activation files so this is particularly important if your systems are not Dells.
Use the Home Premium or Professional 32 Bit version and create a bootable USB.Once the bootable USB is made delete the ei.cfg file. The ei.cfg will select the version to install automatically and deleting it gives you a screen presenting you with the option to install Starter. This is explained in more detail above.
The HP Windows 7 System Locked Preinstallation files for Windows 7 are now uploaded beside the Dell ones on OneDrive: -clean-install-of-windows/microsoft-product-activation/the-activation-backup-and-recovery-program-windows-7-version/They are untested however should work on HP systems like the Dell ones work on Dell systems.
i am trying to download dell oem windows 7 home premium 64bit sp1 iso file..but after downloading and mounting it through daemon tools , in my dvd drive it shows as windows proffesional and not home premium..can you please check at your end?..have the iso's been misplaced??..i dont want to delete ei.cfg file because my pc was home premium so i presume it will automatically get activated..and i also have my genuine win7 home premium 64bit sp1 key with me..
Thanks for this post, it's really helpful. However, I can't seem to download a ISO from the digital river links that are the correct file size, they all end up 2,619,392 KB. How do I get the full image? Thanks
Beginning Verify and Repair transactionVerify completeRepairing 3 componentsBeginning Verify and Repair transactionRepairing corrupted file [ml:520260,l:7437]"\??\C:\Windows\system32\drivers\en-US"\[l:2814]"usbhub.sys.mui" from storeRepairing corrupted file [ml:5829,l:5628]"\??\C:\Windows\system32\wbem"\[l:189]"aeinv.mof" from storeRepair completeCommitting transactionVerify and Repair Transaction completed. All files and registry keys listed in this transaction have been successfully repaired
It says the files have been repaired, but the errors show up every scan. I have tried replacing those files with the copies in the amd64 folder and with ones from another computer, but then the scans say all of them have errors. I have tried doing the install twice, once after wiping with DBAN, and the other using diskpart, and both times I get the same results. I tried a different ISO and those errors did not appear. I keep trying your version because it looks nicer and runs smoother (albeit with SFC errors).
However because this guide is for Windows 7 (which cannot pass SecureBoot) and not windows 8.1/10 the USB Flash Drive can be setup to use the GPT partition scheme and NTFS. This configuration has to be used as the "Windows 7 SP2" .iso has a file on it (the install.wim) which exceeds 4 GB. I just used 16 GB drives as they are what I have too hand. Not sure how 64 GB USB flash drives will cope but it should be fine.
1. Bios ver: 1.4.42. ePSA: Build 4304.07 UEFI ROM3. Bios Boot file used: PCIRoot for SATA 0x2,0x0 /HD GPT4. I booted using UEFI with GPT formated USB 3.05. I manually added a USB boot device but did not use it in lieu of item 3 above via the Bios auto detection.
Otherwise you can use the Windows 7 SP1 Home Premium commercial OEM .iso. In this case you should be able to install without a product key and use the ABR program with the Samsung cert file to activate Windows using Toshiba OEM System Locked Preinstallation: -activation-backup-and-recovery-program-windows-vista-7-version/
I want to re-install Windows 7 Home Premium 64 bits on a Dell Inspiron N5110 of 2012 with a non UEFI BIOS. I downloaded the iso from your site. I used Rufus 2.11 to check the integrity of the file. Everything is fine. I transfer it to an 8 gig USB drive using your instructions for a non UEFI Bios.
I boot the laptop with the USB key, the Windows installation begin and now I have the popup telling me a driver is missing (like you said on your guide). On another USB drive, I has downloaded the SATA drivers, I browse my USB drive to find the F6FLPY-X64 folder, I select it, press NEXT. And 2 minutes after I receive that popup mesage: "No new devices could be found. Make sure the driver files are correct and located on the driver installation media. I tried to install the same driver from the Dell Drivers CD. Same error. I tried to install the SATA driver from my hard drive with the old installation of Windows 7. Same error.
I have been going through some of the material related to the ISO files and believe that you have updated the 2 32bit windows 7 ISOs but not the articles content for checksums and files sizes. The article refers to April 2016 files, but the file names say September 2016.
Can you also please reconfirm that the files in the "Dell Windows 7 OEM" are your slipstreamed versions of the Dell OEM product, not Dell OEM product (with the possible exception of the Skylake multi-language ISO).
I am also not clear on the Skylake article about the applicability of the 2016 DVD to older hardware. You also indicate at the bottom that the new images in this article are for the newer Skylake, however I just downloaded the Dell images from download link at Dell. I have a 7010 and a 3020. The ISO's downloaded were the WGC5Y_2FR1DA00_W7SP1PRO64_ENG.iso)(the English only version)and G13K9_PW4KGA00_W7SP1PRO64_ROW(DL)ISO respectively. I have not tried to install either and do not plan to in the short term, though I may try one on an older Dell Optiplex 780 which does not offer a download file, but I have available on the bench.
Again, I will suggest adding a Readme file to the G-Drive in each folder. The "old" 32 bit files now show an April 22,2017 date and 2 of the 64 bit ISO's "April" files a December 15, 2016 date. A note about which generation of CPU is supported would also be good. 2ff7e9595c
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