
- #NORTON GHOST 15 64 BIT WINDOWS 7 INSTALL#
- #NORTON GHOST 15 64 BIT WINDOWS 7 UPDATE#
- #NORTON GHOST 15 64 BIT WINDOWS 7 DRIVER#
- #NORTON GHOST 15 64 BIT WINDOWS 7 PC#
#NORTON GHOST 15 64 BIT WINDOWS 7 DRIVER#
But if Windows can't find a driver for your device, and the device didn't come with driver software, you can look for a driver on the device manufacturer's website.
#NORTON GHOST 15 64 BIT WINDOWS 7 INSTALL#
It's best to let Windows install device drivers automatically.
#NORTON GHOST 15 64 BIT WINDOWS 7 UPDATE#
To download and update a driver yourself: Misleading but I guess we bought into it: Notes from MS & Symantec some helpful some not: Thanks for the assistance (Google: 'WAN Miniport (IKEv2) (Unusable 64-bit driver)' for some more of my story in drilling down and killing this dragon. > Will Ghost 15 System Recovery Disk then be able to work on my external HDD or CD drives (if identified as startup in the bootable device listed in the BIOS)? > Will it be a problem to my 64-bit files? "Use those 3 files in a folder and use them to make the custom disk."? Used my WinRAR to open the sp44547.exe and extracted the.
#NORTON GHOST 15 64 BIT WINDOWS 7 PC#
Hard drives were Hitachi desktar 7K1000.Problem with Norton Ghost 15 on my Win-7 64-bit PC 'WAN Miniport (IKEv2) (Unusable 64-bit driver)' needed a 32-bit driver so I took Dave's advice (thanks DaveH).ĭownloaded from HP the sp44547.exe (even though it said for Win-7 '32-bit' OS). I have reached over 6000 MB/min in a partition to partition copy with SATA mode set as IDE. Restore is also always faster than backup. Ghost 2003 in a motherboard with SB700/710/750 runs much faster in IDE than AHCI. Would you mind sharing what sped are you achieving for backup / restore? If you can change the SATa mode to IDE, try it also. There are copy sector by sector options or copy master boot record options, and I am sure one of those options will work without the script trick, I just haven't tried them yet. I know the switch /fdsp doesn't work in partition to image, I just kept in case I need to do a disk to image and forget to run the script. GHOST.EXE -auto -fro -span -split=1475 -crcignore -fdsp Put the script in your bootable USB flash drive. Yes, it is an additional step, but you perform a quick clean of the disk before imaging, don't you? You surely can afford the extra 10 seconds to run the script before turning the machine off. That is the intention of a backup image, to be used in case of disaster The image created can be deployed to any hard drive, not just the one used to create the image. Those lines basically tell vista / win7 to reset the signature bytes. Make your image as normal (partition to image). cmd file containing the following lines:īEFORE making the image, run the bat or cmd file from within windows, and then turn the machine off.

Ghost 2003 cannot copy the signature bytes of the disk when doing partition to partition / image, so here is the trick. It will cost you, however, 5 additional mintues and some dead heart cells for the scare

Booting from the OS media and selecting repair will fix it with no issues at all. If you restore one of your images to the exact same physical hard disk that contained the operating system from where you made the image, the image will work fine without any switches, as the disk signature bytes don't change (same disk) If you restore that image to a different hard drive or partition in a different hard drive (disk change), win7 will fail to boot, asking for the OS media to perform a repair. WinXP didn't enforce to have the same signature bytes. The signature bytes, as you know, identify the hard drive. Tricky part here is, that switch ONLY works in disk to image or disk to disk. Click to expand.The switch /fdsp copies the signature bytes of the disk.
