![usb boot disk manager usb boot disk manager](https://i.stack.imgur.com/iIvXj.jpg)
Having exhausted all options (including replacing Media Creation Tool with Rufus) I tried with a dead cheap drive I found on my wife’s desk. No combination of BIOS settings made the flash drive appear in the list of boot devices. Recently though, I got cocky (and also could not find that known good drive): I tried a modern USB 3.x flash drive on a brand-new Dell XPS 15, only to fail miserably. The experience was so frustrating that I used the same “proven” old USB flash drive ever since. It took me several hours to identify USB 3 as the root cause.
![usb boot disk manager usb boot disk manager](https://i2.wp.com/techsprobe.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/2019-02-25_20-10-12.png)
Personally, I encountered it as early as 2013 with a Sony Vaio laptop. The sad news is that, even in 2020, BIOS support for USB 3.x can be buggy or simply be missing. If in doubt: USB 2 flash drives are cheaper and slower, USB 3.x drives are bulkier. When that happens, a common cause is USB 3.x and the solution is simple: use a USB 2 flash drive. Sometimes, however, it breaks at a crucial step: the USB flash drive does not show up in the list of bootable devices. The process outlined above is simple and painless. Problem: USB Flash Drive Does Not Show Up
Usb boot disk manager install#
Clean Install of Windows: How the Process Should Work Getting rid of all the unwanted modifications is a powerful motivation to install Windows from scratch, specifically on new devices. Instead, they make any number of changes to the preinstalled OS that may introduce bloat and security issues. PC or Laptop vendors do not ship “clean” Windows installations on their devices. Penguin USB by Lucius Kwok under CC Why Install Windows From Scratch?