![]() If you find another way to install it without endangering the whole disk, just tell me. Keep in mind that this installer will wipe the selected disk completely, so backup your data beforehand. In BDU, you still have to enable the listing of internal, fixed disks first. But check first if you have a cardreader, especially when you own a notebook. If your legacy BIOS does not support USB-boot, then you shouldn’t stick in a PCIe SSD into your machine anyways… A good reason to install it to a SATA-device might be, that you don’t have any USB-ports left or if you are using a notebook (I don’t consider sticking out USB-drives as a permanent and convenient solution). You also don’t have to worry about data-loss when updating it. It’s easily replaceable and fastforward to install. Alternatively you can also use a SATA-device, but I won’t cover the installation to a internal harddisk/SSD in this guide, as I like the concept of a seperate USB-flash for the Clover-EFI bootloader. ![]() a plain USB flash drive or SD-card if a cardreader is present Detailed guide here: Installing Windows 7 on an NVME SSD (from a USB 3.0 thumbdrive) - I will use Windows 10 in this guide) You need to insert the Windows 7 / Server 2008 NVMe driver before installing or insert the appropriate “F6-driver” by your vendor while choosing your installation disk in the Windows Installation Setup. Bootable Windows 7 - 10 installationmedia (USB or a plain optical disc) Since the thread opener Nyctophilia hasn’t been online for a very long time and his guide may not be up-to-date anymore, I recommend to read do we need?
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