Running Spinrite from a USB drive?
I need to use SpinRite on my notebook which has no CD-ROM.
How can I install and run SpinRite from a USB thumbdrive? Such that I could boot the notebook up with a thumbdrive and start SpinRite.
Are all USB thumbdrives capable of booting? I don't even know how to make them boot.
hard-drive usb boot usb-flash-drive spinrite
add a comment |
I need to use SpinRite on my notebook which has no CD-ROM.
How can I install and run SpinRite from a USB thumbdrive? Such that I could boot the notebook up with a thumbdrive and start SpinRite.
Are all USB thumbdrives capable of booting? I don't even know how to make them boot.
hard-drive usb boot usb-flash-drive spinrite
Possible duplicate: serverfault.com/questions/43259/…
– Christoffer Madsen
Jun 18 '10 at 10:12
Not a duplicate - that question is about checking hard disk drives in USB devices (after starting SpinRite in any way that works), not about starting SpinRite itself.
– Peter Mortensen
Mar 30 '12 at 16:57
add a comment |
I need to use SpinRite on my notebook which has no CD-ROM.
How can I install and run SpinRite from a USB thumbdrive? Such that I could boot the notebook up with a thumbdrive and start SpinRite.
Are all USB thumbdrives capable of booting? I don't even know how to make them boot.
hard-drive usb boot usb-flash-drive spinrite
I need to use SpinRite on my notebook which has no CD-ROM.
How can I install and run SpinRite from a USB thumbdrive? Such that I could boot the notebook up with a thumbdrive and start SpinRite.
Are all USB thumbdrives capable of booting? I don't even know how to make them boot.
hard-drive usb boot usb-flash-drive spinrite
hard-drive usb boot usb-flash-drive spinrite
edited Mar 30 '12 at 16:45
Peter Mortensen
8,351166185
8,351166185
asked Jun 18 '10 at 9:43
SnackmooreSnackmoore
483139
483139
Possible duplicate: serverfault.com/questions/43259/…
– Christoffer Madsen
Jun 18 '10 at 10:12
Not a duplicate - that question is about checking hard disk drives in USB devices (after starting SpinRite in any way that works), not about starting SpinRite itself.
– Peter Mortensen
Mar 30 '12 at 16:57
add a comment |
Possible duplicate: serverfault.com/questions/43259/…
– Christoffer Madsen
Jun 18 '10 at 10:12
Not a duplicate - that question is about checking hard disk drives in USB devices (after starting SpinRite in any way that works), not about starting SpinRite itself.
– Peter Mortensen
Mar 30 '12 at 16:57
Possible duplicate: serverfault.com/questions/43259/…
– Christoffer Madsen
Jun 18 '10 at 10:12
Possible duplicate: serverfault.com/questions/43259/…
– Christoffer Madsen
Jun 18 '10 at 10:12
Not a duplicate - that question is about checking hard disk drives in USB devices (after starting SpinRite in any way that works), not about starting SpinRite itself.
– Peter Mortensen
Mar 30 '12 at 16:57
Not a duplicate - that question is about checking hard disk drives in USB devices (after starting SpinRite in any way that works), not about starting SpinRite itself.
– Peter Mortensen
Mar 30 '12 at 16:57
add a comment |
7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
I tried the following.
Download and install "HP USB Disk Storage Format Tool - v2.1.8" from
http://files.extremeoverclocking.com/file.php?f=197
Click on Blue "Primary Download site" -- not Green "Downloads" advertisements
or from
http://www.19systems.net/HP-USB-Tool-v2.1.8.exeDownload "Windows 98/DOS boot files" from
http://files.extremeoverclocking.com/file.php?f=196
Click on Blue "Primary Download site" -- not Green "Downloads" advertisements
or from http://www.19systems.net/Win98-Boot-Files.zipUnzip Win98 files into a temporary folder such as Win98boot
For pre-Vista Run "HP USB Disk Storage Format Tool".
For Vista and beyond, right click it and "run as administrator"Use it to format the USB drive and enable the option to make it bootable with files from Win98boot
Copy spinrite.exe to the formatted USB drive
On the target notebook, edit boot sequence so that boot from USB is ahead of HDD
Boot the notebook with it and at DOS prompt, run spinrite.exe
You can now run SpinRite on a CD-ROM-less machine.
3
This is also described on the SpinRite FAQ page (in section "How do I make a bootable USB thumb drive??").
– Peter Mortensen
Mar 30 '12 at 17:04
2
I will add to make sure to choose FAT32 when you're formatting the USB drive
– TrojanName
Sep 23 '14 at 18:43
2
I couldn't get this to work on Win 10, it kept calling the USB stick "write protected" - instead I used Rufus as per Andrew below
– furicle
Oct 13 '17 at 20:32
add a comment |
Also,
You can run the spinrite installer and choose to install onto a drive.
and "Hold down the letter of the drive on the keyboard and press install"
then it boots right into spinrite (Just tested)
2
+1 simplest method. My system also seemed to need the partition on the USB drive set to 'active', which I achieved by using windows 7 fdisk.
– alx9r
Feb 8 '13 at 19:42
1
This worked, but only after I marked the partition as active. I used the diskpart approach to do so, on a Windows 7 machine.
– Marcel
Feb 12 '17 at 21:11
1
This method is not 100%. It did not work on my HP Elitebook; a laptop known for its boot sensitivity. I have not analyzed what is wrong with the spinrite installer method but I can confirm that the solution by Andrew (superuser.com/a/1252642/247361) worked for me.
– Timothy C. Quinn
Aug 27 '18 at 1:36
add a comment |
I could not get SpinRite 6.0 to boot from my USB drive by using its built-in installer. I tried the accepted answer but it didn't work because HP USB Disk Storage Format Tool reported "Device media is write-protected" (but for some reason it was writable by everything else).
Here's what worked for me:
Download Rufus, a tool for making bootable USB drives. At the time of this writing its version is 2.17.1198.
Run Rufus with the following settings:

- MBR partition scheme for BIOS or UEFI
- FAT32
- 16 kilobytes
- SpinRite 6.0
- [Unchecked] Check devices for bad blocks
- [Checked] Quick format
- [Checked] Create a bootable disk using FreeDOS
- [Checked] Create extended label and icon files
Run the SpinRite 6.0 installer and create an
.isofile.Mount the
.isofile and copySPINRITE.EXEto the USB drive.🤞 Boot the drive. 🤞
DOS should start. Run
spinrite.exe.
1
Thanks Andrew. This solved it for me. I ran Rufus from virtualbox and it did the trick for me. I did not try the HP tool but I had great experiences with Rufus in the past :)
– Timothy C. Quinn
Aug 27 '18 at 1:37
add a comment |
Seems to be described here: https://www.grc.com/sr/faq.htm
How do I make a bootable USB thumb drive?
Hewlett Packard (HP) makes an easy-to-use utility called “HP USB Disk Format Tool”, which includes a "Create a DOS Startup Disk" option. It's freely available from: http://files.extremeoverclocking.com/file.php?f=197 (mirror) along with the Windows 98/DOS boot files.
Run the HP tool, pointing it at the directory where you unzipped the DOS boot files, and it will automatically build a bootable DOS USB drive using those files. Next, copy your original SPINRITE.EXE file onto the root directory of your USB drive. Once done, reboot the system with your BIOS configured to boot from USB drives. At the DOS prompt, type spinrite to start SpinRite.
Note that this also has the advantage of using real Microsoft MS-DOS files rather than the “FreeDOS” files which accompany SpinRite. The real, original MS-DOS may operate more consistently on less compatible systems.
add a comment |
SpinRite 6.0 lets you install make any writable drive bootable using an option on its main menu, as noted above by Travis. You may have to hunt around a bit in your BIOS Setup menu to find the option for elevating you drive, such as a USB flash drive, to the first position.
You can make an inexpensive, quiet "SpinRite machine" by buying a Zotac mini-PC without a hard drive and just booting from a USB flash drive or memory card. Plug in a hard drive dock (toaster) so you can easily prepare or refresh any of your 3.5 or 2.5 inch drives.
add a comment |
For *nix users, it is possible to boot Spinrite by just writing the floppy disk image of Spinrite to a usb drive.
dd if=spinrite.img conv=notrunc of=/dev/sdx
or
cat floppy.img > /dev/sdx
Where sdx is your usb drive. Root privileges required.
If you're feeling fancy, you can also integrate Spinrite onto a syslinux or extlinux usb drive with a boot menu. For example, here's a minimal working syslinux.conf that also includes memtest on a single usb drive:
default vesamenu.c32
label spinrite
menu label Run SpinRite 6
kernel memdisk
initrd floppy.img
label memtest
menu label Run MemTest86+
linux memtest
See the syslinux documentation for more details about creating boot menus.
add a comment |
I've heard that SpinRite can be ran as virtual machine. This won't require a physical CD drive as SpinRite is loaded onto the VM from an ISO file.
How to Run SpinRite in Virtualbox
2
I've had success doing this too. Main issue I've had is it's incredibly slow, regardless of hypervisor. In most cases, it's still faster to boot DOS with SpinRite directly (or remove the drive and attach to another machine if you can't run SpinRite on the original machine).
– Ruben Schade
Apr 27 '15 at 2:12
add a comment |
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7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
I tried the following.
Download and install "HP USB Disk Storage Format Tool - v2.1.8" from
http://files.extremeoverclocking.com/file.php?f=197
Click on Blue "Primary Download site" -- not Green "Downloads" advertisements
or from
http://www.19systems.net/HP-USB-Tool-v2.1.8.exeDownload "Windows 98/DOS boot files" from
http://files.extremeoverclocking.com/file.php?f=196
Click on Blue "Primary Download site" -- not Green "Downloads" advertisements
or from http://www.19systems.net/Win98-Boot-Files.zipUnzip Win98 files into a temporary folder such as Win98boot
For pre-Vista Run "HP USB Disk Storage Format Tool".
For Vista and beyond, right click it and "run as administrator"Use it to format the USB drive and enable the option to make it bootable with files from Win98boot
Copy spinrite.exe to the formatted USB drive
On the target notebook, edit boot sequence so that boot from USB is ahead of HDD
Boot the notebook with it and at DOS prompt, run spinrite.exe
You can now run SpinRite on a CD-ROM-less machine.
3
This is also described on the SpinRite FAQ page (in section "How do I make a bootable USB thumb drive??").
– Peter Mortensen
Mar 30 '12 at 17:04
2
I will add to make sure to choose FAT32 when you're formatting the USB drive
– TrojanName
Sep 23 '14 at 18:43
2
I couldn't get this to work on Win 10, it kept calling the USB stick "write protected" - instead I used Rufus as per Andrew below
– furicle
Oct 13 '17 at 20:32
add a comment |
I tried the following.
Download and install "HP USB Disk Storage Format Tool - v2.1.8" from
http://files.extremeoverclocking.com/file.php?f=197
Click on Blue "Primary Download site" -- not Green "Downloads" advertisements
or from
http://www.19systems.net/HP-USB-Tool-v2.1.8.exeDownload "Windows 98/DOS boot files" from
http://files.extremeoverclocking.com/file.php?f=196
Click on Blue "Primary Download site" -- not Green "Downloads" advertisements
or from http://www.19systems.net/Win98-Boot-Files.zipUnzip Win98 files into a temporary folder such as Win98boot
For pre-Vista Run "HP USB Disk Storage Format Tool".
For Vista and beyond, right click it and "run as administrator"Use it to format the USB drive and enable the option to make it bootable with files from Win98boot
Copy spinrite.exe to the formatted USB drive
On the target notebook, edit boot sequence so that boot from USB is ahead of HDD
Boot the notebook with it and at DOS prompt, run spinrite.exe
You can now run SpinRite on a CD-ROM-less machine.
3
This is also described on the SpinRite FAQ page (in section "How do I make a bootable USB thumb drive??").
– Peter Mortensen
Mar 30 '12 at 17:04
2
I will add to make sure to choose FAT32 when you're formatting the USB drive
– TrojanName
Sep 23 '14 at 18:43
2
I couldn't get this to work on Win 10, it kept calling the USB stick "write protected" - instead I used Rufus as per Andrew below
– furicle
Oct 13 '17 at 20:32
add a comment |
I tried the following.
Download and install "HP USB Disk Storage Format Tool - v2.1.8" from
http://files.extremeoverclocking.com/file.php?f=197
Click on Blue "Primary Download site" -- not Green "Downloads" advertisements
or from
http://www.19systems.net/HP-USB-Tool-v2.1.8.exeDownload "Windows 98/DOS boot files" from
http://files.extremeoverclocking.com/file.php?f=196
Click on Blue "Primary Download site" -- not Green "Downloads" advertisements
or from http://www.19systems.net/Win98-Boot-Files.zipUnzip Win98 files into a temporary folder such as Win98boot
For pre-Vista Run "HP USB Disk Storage Format Tool".
For Vista and beyond, right click it and "run as administrator"Use it to format the USB drive and enable the option to make it bootable with files from Win98boot
Copy spinrite.exe to the formatted USB drive
On the target notebook, edit boot sequence so that boot from USB is ahead of HDD
Boot the notebook with it and at DOS prompt, run spinrite.exe
You can now run SpinRite on a CD-ROM-less machine.
I tried the following.
Download and install "HP USB Disk Storage Format Tool - v2.1.8" from
http://files.extremeoverclocking.com/file.php?f=197
Click on Blue "Primary Download site" -- not Green "Downloads" advertisements
or from
http://www.19systems.net/HP-USB-Tool-v2.1.8.exeDownload "Windows 98/DOS boot files" from
http://files.extremeoverclocking.com/file.php?f=196
Click on Blue "Primary Download site" -- not Green "Downloads" advertisements
or from http://www.19systems.net/Win98-Boot-Files.zipUnzip Win98 files into a temporary folder such as Win98boot
For pre-Vista Run "HP USB Disk Storage Format Tool".
For Vista and beyond, right click it and "run as administrator"Use it to format the USB drive and enable the option to make it bootable with files from Win98boot
Copy spinrite.exe to the formatted USB drive
On the target notebook, edit boot sequence so that boot from USB is ahead of HDD
Boot the notebook with it and at DOS prompt, run spinrite.exe
You can now run SpinRite on a CD-ROM-less machine.
edited Mar 14 '15 at 20:40
Community♦
1
1
answered Jun 19 '10 at 1:50
SnackmooreSnackmoore
483139
483139
3
This is also described on the SpinRite FAQ page (in section "How do I make a bootable USB thumb drive??").
– Peter Mortensen
Mar 30 '12 at 17:04
2
I will add to make sure to choose FAT32 when you're formatting the USB drive
– TrojanName
Sep 23 '14 at 18:43
2
I couldn't get this to work on Win 10, it kept calling the USB stick "write protected" - instead I used Rufus as per Andrew below
– furicle
Oct 13 '17 at 20:32
add a comment |
3
This is also described on the SpinRite FAQ page (in section "How do I make a bootable USB thumb drive??").
– Peter Mortensen
Mar 30 '12 at 17:04
2
I will add to make sure to choose FAT32 when you're formatting the USB drive
– TrojanName
Sep 23 '14 at 18:43
2
I couldn't get this to work on Win 10, it kept calling the USB stick "write protected" - instead I used Rufus as per Andrew below
– furicle
Oct 13 '17 at 20:32
3
3
This is also described on the SpinRite FAQ page (in section "How do I make a bootable USB thumb drive??").
– Peter Mortensen
Mar 30 '12 at 17:04
This is also described on the SpinRite FAQ page (in section "How do I make a bootable USB thumb drive??").
– Peter Mortensen
Mar 30 '12 at 17:04
2
2
I will add to make sure to choose FAT32 when you're formatting the USB drive
– TrojanName
Sep 23 '14 at 18:43
I will add to make sure to choose FAT32 when you're formatting the USB drive
– TrojanName
Sep 23 '14 at 18:43
2
2
I couldn't get this to work on Win 10, it kept calling the USB stick "write protected" - instead I used Rufus as per Andrew below
– furicle
Oct 13 '17 at 20:32
I couldn't get this to work on Win 10, it kept calling the USB stick "write protected" - instead I used Rufus as per Andrew below
– furicle
Oct 13 '17 at 20:32
add a comment |
Also,
You can run the spinrite installer and choose to install onto a drive.
and "Hold down the letter of the drive on the keyboard and press install"
then it boots right into spinrite (Just tested)
2
+1 simplest method. My system also seemed to need the partition on the USB drive set to 'active', which I achieved by using windows 7 fdisk.
– alx9r
Feb 8 '13 at 19:42
1
This worked, but only after I marked the partition as active. I used the diskpart approach to do so, on a Windows 7 machine.
– Marcel
Feb 12 '17 at 21:11
1
This method is not 100%. It did not work on my HP Elitebook; a laptop known for its boot sensitivity. I have not analyzed what is wrong with the spinrite installer method but I can confirm that the solution by Andrew (superuser.com/a/1252642/247361) worked for me.
– Timothy C. Quinn
Aug 27 '18 at 1:36
add a comment |
Also,
You can run the spinrite installer and choose to install onto a drive.
and "Hold down the letter of the drive on the keyboard and press install"
then it boots right into spinrite (Just tested)
2
+1 simplest method. My system also seemed to need the partition on the USB drive set to 'active', which I achieved by using windows 7 fdisk.
– alx9r
Feb 8 '13 at 19:42
1
This worked, but only after I marked the partition as active. I used the diskpart approach to do so, on a Windows 7 machine.
– Marcel
Feb 12 '17 at 21:11
1
This method is not 100%. It did not work on my HP Elitebook; a laptop known for its boot sensitivity. I have not analyzed what is wrong with the spinrite installer method but I can confirm that the solution by Andrew (superuser.com/a/1252642/247361) worked for me.
– Timothy C. Quinn
Aug 27 '18 at 1:36
add a comment |
Also,
You can run the spinrite installer and choose to install onto a drive.
and "Hold down the letter of the drive on the keyboard and press install"
then it boots right into spinrite (Just tested)
Also,
You can run the spinrite installer and choose to install onto a drive.
and "Hold down the letter of the drive on the keyboard and press install"
then it boots right into spinrite (Just tested)
answered Jan 25 '11 at 17:52
TravisTravis
19112
19112
2
+1 simplest method. My system also seemed to need the partition on the USB drive set to 'active', which I achieved by using windows 7 fdisk.
– alx9r
Feb 8 '13 at 19:42
1
This worked, but only after I marked the partition as active. I used the diskpart approach to do so, on a Windows 7 machine.
– Marcel
Feb 12 '17 at 21:11
1
This method is not 100%. It did not work on my HP Elitebook; a laptop known for its boot sensitivity. I have not analyzed what is wrong with the spinrite installer method but I can confirm that the solution by Andrew (superuser.com/a/1252642/247361) worked for me.
– Timothy C. Quinn
Aug 27 '18 at 1:36
add a comment |
2
+1 simplest method. My system also seemed to need the partition on the USB drive set to 'active', which I achieved by using windows 7 fdisk.
– alx9r
Feb 8 '13 at 19:42
1
This worked, but only after I marked the partition as active. I used the diskpart approach to do so, on a Windows 7 machine.
– Marcel
Feb 12 '17 at 21:11
1
This method is not 100%. It did not work on my HP Elitebook; a laptop known for its boot sensitivity. I have not analyzed what is wrong with the spinrite installer method but I can confirm that the solution by Andrew (superuser.com/a/1252642/247361) worked for me.
– Timothy C. Quinn
Aug 27 '18 at 1:36
2
2
+1 simplest method. My system also seemed to need the partition on the USB drive set to 'active', which I achieved by using windows 7 fdisk.
– alx9r
Feb 8 '13 at 19:42
+1 simplest method. My system also seemed to need the partition on the USB drive set to 'active', which I achieved by using windows 7 fdisk.
– alx9r
Feb 8 '13 at 19:42
1
1
This worked, but only after I marked the partition as active. I used the diskpart approach to do so, on a Windows 7 machine.
– Marcel
Feb 12 '17 at 21:11
This worked, but only after I marked the partition as active. I used the diskpart approach to do so, on a Windows 7 machine.
– Marcel
Feb 12 '17 at 21:11
1
1
This method is not 100%. It did not work on my HP Elitebook; a laptop known for its boot sensitivity. I have not analyzed what is wrong with the spinrite installer method but I can confirm that the solution by Andrew (superuser.com/a/1252642/247361) worked for me.
– Timothy C. Quinn
Aug 27 '18 at 1:36
This method is not 100%. It did not work on my HP Elitebook; a laptop known for its boot sensitivity. I have not analyzed what is wrong with the spinrite installer method but I can confirm that the solution by Andrew (superuser.com/a/1252642/247361) worked for me.
– Timothy C. Quinn
Aug 27 '18 at 1:36
add a comment |
I could not get SpinRite 6.0 to boot from my USB drive by using its built-in installer. I tried the accepted answer but it didn't work because HP USB Disk Storage Format Tool reported "Device media is write-protected" (but for some reason it was writable by everything else).
Here's what worked for me:
Download Rufus, a tool for making bootable USB drives. At the time of this writing its version is 2.17.1198.
Run Rufus with the following settings:

- MBR partition scheme for BIOS or UEFI
- FAT32
- 16 kilobytes
- SpinRite 6.0
- [Unchecked] Check devices for bad blocks
- [Checked] Quick format
- [Checked] Create a bootable disk using FreeDOS
- [Checked] Create extended label and icon files
Run the SpinRite 6.0 installer and create an
.isofile.Mount the
.isofile and copySPINRITE.EXEto the USB drive.🤞 Boot the drive. 🤞
DOS should start. Run
spinrite.exe.
1
Thanks Andrew. This solved it for me. I ran Rufus from virtualbox and it did the trick for me. I did not try the HP tool but I had great experiences with Rufus in the past :)
– Timothy C. Quinn
Aug 27 '18 at 1:37
add a comment |
I could not get SpinRite 6.0 to boot from my USB drive by using its built-in installer. I tried the accepted answer but it didn't work because HP USB Disk Storage Format Tool reported "Device media is write-protected" (but for some reason it was writable by everything else).
Here's what worked for me:
Download Rufus, a tool for making bootable USB drives. At the time of this writing its version is 2.17.1198.
Run Rufus with the following settings:

- MBR partition scheme for BIOS or UEFI
- FAT32
- 16 kilobytes
- SpinRite 6.0
- [Unchecked] Check devices for bad blocks
- [Checked] Quick format
- [Checked] Create a bootable disk using FreeDOS
- [Checked] Create extended label and icon files
Run the SpinRite 6.0 installer and create an
.isofile.Mount the
.isofile and copySPINRITE.EXEto the USB drive.🤞 Boot the drive. 🤞
DOS should start. Run
spinrite.exe.
1
Thanks Andrew. This solved it for me. I ran Rufus from virtualbox and it did the trick for me. I did not try the HP tool but I had great experiences with Rufus in the past :)
– Timothy C. Quinn
Aug 27 '18 at 1:37
add a comment |
I could not get SpinRite 6.0 to boot from my USB drive by using its built-in installer. I tried the accepted answer but it didn't work because HP USB Disk Storage Format Tool reported "Device media is write-protected" (but for some reason it was writable by everything else).
Here's what worked for me:
Download Rufus, a tool for making bootable USB drives. At the time of this writing its version is 2.17.1198.
Run Rufus with the following settings:

- MBR partition scheme for BIOS or UEFI
- FAT32
- 16 kilobytes
- SpinRite 6.0
- [Unchecked] Check devices for bad blocks
- [Checked] Quick format
- [Checked] Create a bootable disk using FreeDOS
- [Checked] Create extended label and icon files
Run the SpinRite 6.0 installer and create an
.isofile.Mount the
.isofile and copySPINRITE.EXEto the USB drive.🤞 Boot the drive. 🤞
DOS should start. Run
spinrite.exe.
I could not get SpinRite 6.0 to boot from my USB drive by using its built-in installer. I tried the accepted answer but it didn't work because HP USB Disk Storage Format Tool reported "Device media is write-protected" (but for some reason it was writable by everything else).
Here's what worked for me:
Download Rufus, a tool for making bootable USB drives. At the time of this writing its version is 2.17.1198.
Run Rufus with the following settings:

- MBR partition scheme for BIOS or UEFI
- FAT32
- 16 kilobytes
- SpinRite 6.0
- [Unchecked] Check devices for bad blocks
- [Checked] Quick format
- [Checked] Create a bootable disk using FreeDOS
- [Checked] Create extended label and icon files
Run the SpinRite 6.0 installer and create an
.isofile.Mount the
.isofile and copySPINRITE.EXEto the USB drive.🤞 Boot the drive. 🤞
DOS should start. Run
spinrite.exe.
answered Sep 22 '17 at 2:35
Andrew KeetonAndrew Keeton
4402815
4402815
1
Thanks Andrew. This solved it for me. I ran Rufus from virtualbox and it did the trick for me. I did not try the HP tool but I had great experiences with Rufus in the past :)
– Timothy C. Quinn
Aug 27 '18 at 1:37
add a comment |
1
Thanks Andrew. This solved it for me. I ran Rufus from virtualbox and it did the trick for me. I did not try the HP tool but I had great experiences with Rufus in the past :)
– Timothy C. Quinn
Aug 27 '18 at 1:37
1
1
Thanks Andrew. This solved it for me. I ran Rufus from virtualbox and it did the trick for me. I did not try the HP tool but I had great experiences with Rufus in the past :)
– Timothy C. Quinn
Aug 27 '18 at 1:37
Thanks Andrew. This solved it for me. I ran Rufus from virtualbox and it did the trick for me. I did not try the HP tool but I had great experiences with Rufus in the past :)
– Timothy C. Quinn
Aug 27 '18 at 1:37
add a comment |
Seems to be described here: https://www.grc.com/sr/faq.htm
How do I make a bootable USB thumb drive?
Hewlett Packard (HP) makes an easy-to-use utility called “HP USB Disk Format Tool”, which includes a "Create a DOS Startup Disk" option. It's freely available from: http://files.extremeoverclocking.com/file.php?f=197 (mirror) along with the Windows 98/DOS boot files.
Run the HP tool, pointing it at the directory where you unzipped the DOS boot files, and it will automatically build a bootable DOS USB drive using those files. Next, copy your original SPINRITE.EXE file onto the root directory of your USB drive. Once done, reboot the system with your BIOS configured to boot from USB drives. At the DOS prompt, type spinrite to start SpinRite.
Note that this also has the advantage of using real Microsoft MS-DOS files rather than the “FreeDOS” files which accompany SpinRite. The real, original MS-DOS may operate more consistently on less compatible systems.
add a comment |
Seems to be described here: https://www.grc.com/sr/faq.htm
How do I make a bootable USB thumb drive?
Hewlett Packard (HP) makes an easy-to-use utility called “HP USB Disk Format Tool”, which includes a "Create a DOS Startup Disk" option. It's freely available from: http://files.extremeoverclocking.com/file.php?f=197 (mirror) along with the Windows 98/DOS boot files.
Run the HP tool, pointing it at the directory where you unzipped the DOS boot files, and it will automatically build a bootable DOS USB drive using those files. Next, copy your original SPINRITE.EXE file onto the root directory of your USB drive. Once done, reboot the system with your BIOS configured to boot from USB drives. At the DOS prompt, type spinrite to start SpinRite.
Note that this also has the advantage of using real Microsoft MS-DOS files rather than the “FreeDOS” files which accompany SpinRite. The real, original MS-DOS may operate more consistently on less compatible systems.
add a comment |
Seems to be described here: https://www.grc.com/sr/faq.htm
How do I make a bootable USB thumb drive?
Hewlett Packard (HP) makes an easy-to-use utility called “HP USB Disk Format Tool”, which includes a "Create a DOS Startup Disk" option. It's freely available from: http://files.extremeoverclocking.com/file.php?f=197 (mirror) along with the Windows 98/DOS boot files.
Run the HP tool, pointing it at the directory where you unzipped the DOS boot files, and it will automatically build a bootable DOS USB drive using those files. Next, copy your original SPINRITE.EXE file onto the root directory of your USB drive. Once done, reboot the system with your BIOS configured to boot from USB drives. At the DOS prompt, type spinrite to start SpinRite.
Note that this also has the advantage of using real Microsoft MS-DOS files rather than the “FreeDOS” files which accompany SpinRite. The real, original MS-DOS may operate more consistently on less compatible systems.
Seems to be described here: https://www.grc.com/sr/faq.htm
How do I make a bootable USB thumb drive?
Hewlett Packard (HP) makes an easy-to-use utility called “HP USB Disk Format Tool”, which includes a "Create a DOS Startup Disk" option. It's freely available from: http://files.extremeoverclocking.com/file.php?f=197 (mirror) along with the Windows 98/DOS boot files.
Run the HP tool, pointing it at the directory where you unzipped the DOS boot files, and it will automatically build a bootable DOS USB drive using those files. Next, copy your original SPINRITE.EXE file onto the root directory of your USB drive. Once done, reboot the system with your BIOS configured to boot from USB drives. At the DOS prompt, type spinrite to start SpinRite.
Note that this also has the advantage of using real Microsoft MS-DOS files rather than the “FreeDOS” files which accompany SpinRite. The real, original MS-DOS may operate more consistently on less compatible systems.
edited Mar 14 '15 at 20:00
Vinayak
8,58544074
8,58544074
answered Jun 18 '10 at 10:12
Christoffer MadsenChristoffer Madsen
82868
82868
add a comment |
add a comment |
SpinRite 6.0 lets you install make any writable drive bootable using an option on its main menu, as noted above by Travis. You may have to hunt around a bit in your BIOS Setup menu to find the option for elevating you drive, such as a USB flash drive, to the first position.
You can make an inexpensive, quiet "SpinRite machine" by buying a Zotac mini-PC without a hard drive and just booting from a USB flash drive or memory card. Plug in a hard drive dock (toaster) so you can easily prepare or refresh any of your 3.5 or 2.5 inch drives.
add a comment |
SpinRite 6.0 lets you install make any writable drive bootable using an option on its main menu, as noted above by Travis. You may have to hunt around a bit in your BIOS Setup menu to find the option for elevating you drive, such as a USB flash drive, to the first position.
You can make an inexpensive, quiet "SpinRite machine" by buying a Zotac mini-PC without a hard drive and just booting from a USB flash drive or memory card. Plug in a hard drive dock (toaster) so you can easily prepare or refresh any of your 3.5 or 2.5 inch drives.
add a comment |
SpinRite 6.0 lets you install make any writable drive bootable using an option on its main menu, as noted above by Travis. You may have to hunt around a bit in your BIOS Setup menu to find the option for elevating you drive, such as a USB flash drive, to the first position.
You can make an inexpensive, quiet "SpinRite machine" by buying a Zotac mini-PC without a hard drive and just booting from a USB flash drive or memory card. Plug in a hard drive dock (toaster) so you can easily prepare or refresh any of your 3.5 or 2.5 inch drives.
SpinRite 6.0 lets you install make any writable drive bootable using an option on its main menu, as noted above by Travis. You may have to hunt around a bit in your BIOS Setup menu to find the option for elevating you drive, such as a USB flash drive, to the first position.
You can make an inexpensive, quiet "SpinRite machine" by buying a Zotac mini-PC without a hard drive and just booting from a USB flash drive or memory card. Plug in a hard drive dock (toaster) so you can easily prepare or refresh any of your 3.5 or 2.5 inch drives.
answered Jun 19 '11 at 1:14
WellsWells
714
714
add a comment |
add a comment |
For *nix users, it is possible to boot Spinrite by just writing the floppy disk image of Spinrite to a usb drive.
dd if=spinrite.img conv=notrunc of=/dev/sdx
or
cat floppy.img > /dev/sdx
Where sdx is your usb drive. Root privileges required.
If you're feeling fancy, you can also integrate Spinrite onto a syslinux or extlinux usb drive with a boot menu. For example, here's a minimal working syslinux.conf that also includes memtest on a single usb drive:
default vesamenu.c32
label spinrite
menu label Run SpinRite 6
kernel memdisk
initrd floppy.img
label memtest
menu label Run MemTest86+
linux memtest
See the syslinux documentation for more details about creating boot menus.
add a comment |
For *nix users, it is possible to boot Spinrite by just writing the floppy disk image of Spinrite to a usb drive.
dd if=spinrite.img conv=notrunc of=/dev/sdx
or
cat floppy.img > /dev/sdx
Where sdx is your usb drive. Root privileges required.
If you're feeling fancy, you can also integrate Spinrite onto a syslinux or extlinux usb drive with a boot menu. For example, here's a minimal working syslinux.conf that also includes memtest on a single usb drive:
default vesamenu.c32
label spinrite
menu label Run SpinRite 6
kernel memdisk
initrd floppy.img
label memtest
menu label Run MemTest86+
linux memtest
See the syslinux documentation for more details about creating boot menus.
add a comment |
For *nix users, it is possible to boot Spinrite by just writing the floppy disk image of Spinrite to a usb drive.
dd if=spinrite.img conv=notrunc of=/dev/sdx
or
cat floppy.img > /dev/sdx
Where sdx is your usb drive. Root privileges required.
If you're feeling fancy, you can also integrate Spinrite onto a syslinux or extlinux usb drive with a boot menu. For example, here's a minimal working syslinux.conf that also includes memtest on a single usb drive:
default vesamenu.c32
label spinrite
menu label Run SpinRite 6
kernel memdisk
initrd floppy.img
label memtest
menu label Run MemTest86+
linux memtest
See the syslinux documentation for more details about creating boot menus.
For *nix users, it is possible to boot Spinrite by just writing the floppy disk image of Spinrite to a usb drive.
dd if=spinrite.img conv=notrunc of=/dev/sdx
or
cat floppy.img > /dev/sdx
Where sdx is your usb drive. Root privileges required.
If you're feeling fancy, you can also integrate Spinrite onto a syslinux or extlinux usb drive with a boot menu. For example, here's a minimal working syslinux.conf that also includes memtest on a single usb drive:
default vesamenu.c32
label spinrite
menu label Run SpinRite 6
kernel memdisk
initrd floppy.img
label memtest
menu label Run MemTest86+
linux memtest
See the syslinux documentation for more details about creating boot menus.
answered Aug 7 '14 at 2:12
isuldorisuldor
1,29531628
1,29531628
add a comment |
add a comment |
I've heard that SpinRite can be ran as virtual machine. This won't require a physical CD drive as SpinRite is loaded onto the VM from an ISO file.
How to Run SpinRite in Virtualbox
2
I've had success doing this too. Main issue I've had is it's incredibly slow, regardless of hypervisor. In most cases, it's still faster to boot DOS with SpinRite directly (or remove the drive and attach to another machine if you can't run SpinRite on the original machine).
– Ruben Schade
Apr 27 '15 at 2:12
add a comment |
I've heard that SpinRite can be ran as virtual machine. This won't require a physical CD drive as SpinRite is loaded onto the VM from an ISO file.
How to Run SpinRite in Virtualbox
2
I've had success doing this too. Main issue I've had is it's incredibly slow, regardless of hypervisor. In most cases, it's still faster to boot DOS with SpinRite directly (or remove the drive and attach to another machine if you can't run SpinRite on the original machine).
– Ruben Schade
Apr 27 '15 at 2:12
add a comment |
I've heard that SpinRite can be ran as virtual machine. This won't require a physical CD drive as SpinRite is loaded onto the VM from an ISO file.
How to Run SpinRite in Virtualbox
I've heard that SpinRite can be ran as virtual machine. This won't require a physical CD drive as SpinRite is loaded onto the VM from an ISO file.
How to Run SpinRite in Virtualbox
edited Apr 27 '15 at 9:36
answered Jan 30 '15 at 9:45
Dan StevensDan Stevens
151410
151410
2
I've had success doing this too. Main issue I've had is it's incredibly slow, regardless of hypervisor. In most cases, it's still faster to boot DOS with SpinRite directly (or remove the drive and attach to another machine if you can't run SpinRite on the original machine).
– Ruben Schade
Apr 27 '15 at 2:12
add a comment |
2
I've had success doing this too. Main issue I've had is it's incredibly slow, regardless of hypervisor. In most cases, it's still faster to boot DOS with SpinRite directly (or remove the drive and attach to another machine if you can't run SpinRite on the original machine).
– Ruben Schade
Apr 27 '15 at 2:12
2
2
I've had success doing this too. Main issue I've had is it's incredibly slow, regardless of hypervisor. In most cases, it's still faster to boot DOS with SpinRite directly (or remove the drive and attach to another machine if you can't run SpinRite on the original machine).
– Ruben Schade
Apr 27 '15 at 2:12
I've had success doing this too. Main issue I've had is it's incredibly slow, regardless of hypervisor. In most cases, it's still faster to boot DOS with SpinRite directly (or remove the drive and attach to another machine if you can't run SpinRite on the original machine).
– Ruben Schade
Apr 27 '15 at 2:12
add a comment |
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Possible duplicate: serverfault.com/questions/43259/…
– Christoffer Madsen
Jun 18 '10 at 10:12
Not a duplicate - that question is about checking hard disk drives in USB devices (after starting SpinRite in any way that works), not about starting SpinRite itself.
– Peter Mortensen
Mar 30 '12 at 16:57