Windows 7 Installation, Missing CD/DVD Driver - Page 2
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I downloaded it from the official Windows 7 site, opened by Microsoft after a completely legal registration.
Hello everyone,
still the same problem "missing CD/DVD driver", I even tried with a friend's DVD, his disc works
well, because he was able to complete his installation, so it doesn't come from a bad download or a bad burn in my case. My drive is a Nec ND-3500 AG DVD burner.
thank you all for your help.
still the same problem "missing CD/DVD driver", I even tried with a friend's DVD, his disc works
well, because he was able to complete his installation, so it doesn't come from a bad download or a bad burn in my case. My drive is a Nec ND-3500 AG DVD burner.
thank you all for your help.
I had the same problem and tried different versions of Windows 7, and finally I reconnected my DVD drive as a slave to the hard drive, and there you go, it worked to my great surprise. I hope this information helps you.
Hello,
I installed Windows 7 on several PCs but before doing so, I downloaded the Microsoft utility
Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor to get a report of the drivers we need before installation
download Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor
then I burned the drivers to a CD.
Just put the CD in when prompted during the Windows 7 installation and then replace it with the Windows 7 installation CD when the requested drivers have been loaded
bye
borozore
I installed Windows 7 on several PCs but before doing so, I downloaded the Microsoft utility
Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor to get a report of the drivers we need before installation
download Windows 7 Upgrade Advisor
then I burned the drivers to a CD.
Just put the CD in when prompted during the Windows 7 installation and then replace it with the Windows 7 installation CD when the requested drivers have been loaded
bye
borozore
Hello everyone, after a good headache with Alienware who wanted to charge me for the issue with the driver CD that causes problems when trying to install Windows 7 without updates, the night brings advice. You just remove the alien DVD and simply boot from an external USB DVD, and voila, miracle—no more errors regarding the installation. Hi everyone and enjoy SEVEN!
Hello,
I have a retail version of Seven Pro, so the re-download solution doesn't apply...
However, the solution that works is, when Seven asks you to provide the CD/DVD driver,
turn off the PC, unplug your DVD drive, set it to slave using the jumper.
Restart and everything works, kudos to whoever found the solution, it works...
However, I find it scandalous that Microsoft has fallen into this kind of negligence; it's a shame in our time to have to use "jumpers" that have disappeared since SATA to be able to install this new OS...
++
I have a retail version of Seven Pro, so the re-download solution doesn't apply...
However, the solution that works is, when Seven asks you to provide the CD/DVD driver,
turn off the PC, unplug your DVD drive, set it to slave using the jumper.
Restart and everything works, kudos to whoever found the solution, it works...
However, I find it scandalous that Microsoft has fallen into this kind of negligence; it's a shame in our time to have to use "jumpers" that have disappeared since SATA to be able to install this new OS...
++
Hello everyone, I had the same problem with the missing CD/DVD drive driver, so I tried F8 during the boot on the CD and then the option to remove signed driver upgrades (something like that) and it works. There you go, if it can help others.
Hello,
how do you set the CD-ROM drive to slave when you only have one IDE controller and two SATA controllers, knowing that the hard drive is connected to the first SATA port? I tried connecting a second HDD as master on IDE1 with the CD-ROM as slave, but I still get the same error message.
how do you set the CD-ROM drive to slave when you only have one IDE controller and two SATA controllers, knowing that the hard drive is connected to the first SATA port? I tried connecting a second HDD as master on IDE1 with the CD-ROM as slave, but I still get the same error message.
I had the same problem.
Is your motherboard not set to RAID?
Check that your CD drive is set to IDE in the BIOS (and not in RAID).
That's the issue I had personally, and I resolved it this way.
Good luck!
Is your motherboard not set to RAID?
Check that your CD drive is set to IDE in the BIOS (and not in RAID).
That's the issue I had personally, and I resolved it this way.
Good luck!
I just changed the CD-ROM drive for the installation, and everything worked without any questions about why we were going to be bothered with this imaginary driver... I'm a fan of the three points too (...)...
To make Windows 7 recognize my DVD drive, I had to go into regedit and remove the upper filter and lower filter, and that worked.
Since Windows Vista, the boot sector of an installation DVD
is no longer in the same format as for earlier versions of Windows.
The BIOS of some motherboards does not recognize this format, which is
why the DVD does not start. This is not a driver issue, but rather a BIOS issue.
is no longer in the same format as for earlier versions of Windows.
The BIOS of some motherboards does not recognize this format, which is
why the DVD does not start. This is not a driver issue, but rather a BIOS issue.
I had the same issue, missing DVD driver to install Windows 7 after attempting an installation following the legal download of an ISO. I searched for all possible solutions (as my DVD is PATA and my HDD SATA), I changed the BIOS, I changed the cable connection, I switched the jumper to try Master and then Slave: nothing worked...
So I attempted the installation with the ISO directly on another computer that had the ability to install virtual machines, and the ISO worked perfectly. So it wasn't the ISO that was downloaded incorrectly from the Microsoft site.
I then tried burning the ISO with a different burner than the one in my laptop and there you go... it works.
So I attempted the installation with the ISO directly on another computer that had the ability to install virtual machines, and the ISO worked perfectly. So it wasn't the ISO that was downloaded incorrectly from the Microsoft site.
I then tried burning the ISO with a different burner than the one in my laptop and there you go... it works.
I THINK I HAVE YOUR SOLUTION since I succeeded ;) so indeed it has nothing to do with the CD driver, nothing to do with the burning speed but it's the SATA drivers of the HDD, so retrieve the SATA drivers from Acer, decompress them on a USB stick and at the Vista or Seven prompt, browse and point to the folder and then the miracle happens, two options, either the driver to set up a raid or the simple SATA driver, since I don't have a raid to set up, I chose the simple SATA, and the installation is in progress as I write ;)
Thank you all, I made my little dish from all your posts and the idea popped up :)
Good reinstallation
Thank you all, I made my little dish from all your posts and the idea popped up :)
Good reinstallation
Something really stupid I hadn't thought of while reading the entire topic.
I thought okay, I'll redo my Seven DVD ISO burn at 4X => nada, still missing drivers!
I rechecked the BIOS settings to make sure I'm not in RAID or anything => only SATA & PATA with RAID deactivated => nada, still missing drivers.
I thought, why not try the installation on an IDE disk instead of SATA => same result
In desperation, I thought, why not change the DVD drive itself! And bingo, that's what was causing the problem. I had a simple NEC DVD drive and that was indeed the issue. I put in an old Asus DVD drive I had lying around, and there the whole installation went off without a hitch.
I hope this can help other unfortunate souls like me.
I thought okay, I'll redo my Seven DVD ISO burn at 4X => nada, still missing drivers!
I rechecked the BIOS settings to make sure I'm not in RAID or anything => only SATA & PATA with RAID deactivated => nada, still missing drivers.
I thought, why not try the installation on an IDE disk instead of SATA => same result
In desperation, I thought, why not change the DVD drive itself! And bingo, that's what was causing the problem. I had a simple NEC DVD drive and that was indeed the issue. I put in an old Asus DVD drive I had lying around, and there the whole installation went off without a hitch.
I hope this can help other unfortunate souls like me.
Instead of choosing Install now, opt for Repair your computer, and in the bottom left,
click on repair your computer, then look for the Command Prompt option.
Type this:
format c: /fs:ntfs, then resume the installation, but I hope your Windows is legal,
set the BIOS settings to default
it works 100%
and with a valid license key.
click on repair your computer, then look for the Command Prompt option.
Type this:
format c: /fs:ntfs, then resume the installation, but I hope your Windows is legal,
set the BIOS settings to default
it works 100%
and with a valid license key.
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