WINDOWS 7 LITE 32 BIT MEGA INSTALL
( I used the most recent Win 10 ADK, which may have been the issue instead of using the Win 8 ADK or Win 7 ADK to include the drivers, as an aside since I had the PS2 keyboard and port, it was one more thing I didn't want to troubleshoot during the effort to install Win 7 SP1 again).ģ) You can then try to use the Win 7 USB patcher utilities on the install.wim or disk folder you create for Win 7 that you dropped in the modified install.wim file.ģ) Put a clean Win 10 image on a USB. Also, ignore Intel telling to do the patch program first if using Asrock's utility, as afterwords I could not get DISM to add the hotfix for NVMe for the life of me. It is worth noting that many of the drivers I took from the Chipset and other drivers on the manufacturers page failed to be included in the image, but with DISM, you are told if there was an issue doing so. You can extract the drivers from those sources or AMD's chipset driver from their website.
If you do not have a PS2 MB or a legacy USB 2.0 port, it will complicate things a bit.Ģ) Use DISM with the Install.wim to mount the image and to install the hotfix and drivers you want (you can verify after that they are included in the install.wim).Ģ.a) here is Intel's instructional on NVMe hotfix and Windows instructional on commands to incorporate drivers. Because I couldn't do it or verify it, I went old school with a PS2 keyboard, which this MB has that port.
I found that order matters with my X399 platform on when you incorporate this fix, as if I did so after using the Asrock Win 7 USB 3.0 fix software, it would not allow using DISM to include the hotfix in the image. So, I was installing Win 7 SP1 on an NVMe, which requires the incorporation of a Win 7 SP1 hotfix. How familiar are you with DISM? Or do you have your own copy of NTLite? I recently had to go through all of this again.