And My dear fellow How do you Mount the Virtual ISO from the BIOS to be able to do a CLEAN install via Bootup.
Cheers
jimbo
I'm sorry, I guess I didn't make this too clear. When you install VirtualCloneDrive you are creating a "virtual drive"
on you system that you can mount .iso images to. You can then open the image as though you had burned it to a DVD.
What I was talking about is using the mounted image as a source of the files needed to create the
bootable USB thumb drive installer using the instructions in the tutorial I linked to at the beginning of my post. The mounted .iso takes the place
of the DVD you would burn from the .iso if you wanted to install from a DVD.
The mounted is only a temporry source of the files needed and can be and should be unmounted after sucessfully creating your
bootable USB thumb drive installer.
You install from the USB thumb drive the same way you would from a DVD drive. That is you plug the prepared drive into a USB port before booting your computer and instruct your BIOS to boot to that device instead of your hard drive, floppy or optical drive. This of course is dependant on your BIOS being able to boot from an external USB device.
In most cases newer (2-3 years) computers are capable of booting from a USB device.
With my machine I have two choices, if I hit the F2 key during P.O.S.T. I can get into my BIOS and change the boot order to allow booting from the USB device. The other option I have available to me, and the much handier one, is a feature I can turn on in my BIOS that allows me to hit F12 during P.O.S.T. and bring up a small menu from which I can choose to boot from the hard drive, Optical drive or any USB device I happen to have plugged in at the time. This doesn't change the boot order in the BIOS but allows me to specify what device I want to boot for that time only. Very handy. I'd be willing to bet a lot of modern BIOS's have a similar feature.
I hope this helps clarify things.
BTW you did see the link to the tutorial, it explains things much better than I can.
Link Removed <link
To sum up you are right that mounting the .iso in Windows using any kind of mounting program like VirtualCloneDrive
only allows access to the mounted .iso while Windows is running.
You are only mounting the .iso so it can be used as a source of files used to create your bootable USB installer.
The other method is to create "burn" a DVD with the .iso and use the resulting DVD as a source of files for creating the USB installer.
Of course it takes time to create a DVD, using a mounted .iso eliminates the middleman so to speak.
The other big advantage to using a mounted .iso as a source for the Win 7 install files is that when you use a mounted .iso
you are installing the files from a virtual DVD/CD, this is really your harddrive, which is much faster than any optical drive.
Creating the USB drive installer is much quicker as a result.
BTW, I don't think I like the way this Forum software does links.
If I post a link here it doesn't post the whole URL but creates a link like the one above (loading...) which isn't as apparent as a link as the whole URL.