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G'day,
I've been trying to (clean) install Windows 8 on my PC now for over two weeks now, and it's really getting old.
You can see here that I've outlined my issue to the Windows Technical Community, which has resulted in... absolutely no help at all. http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_8-windows_install/windows-8-clean-install-fails-before-country/64229d0a-0220-45a9-bdc6-c41062df8a75
Tl;dr? Yeah, me too. Basically, I've shrunk the HDD, it's working (I'm on that PC on XP).
I've put both the x64 and the x86 DVD's, AND an another HDD with W8 installed on it from my test machine, and they ALL Fail to load. (I get the slanty windows logo, and after about 10 seconds BOOM. Sad face error screen.)
I really don't want to have to remove the video card, or the unevenly/not partnered DIMM in the 2nd Memory channel - because the case is .. stupid, and in an awkward spot, but I'm running out of ideas!
PS. I tried turning on ACHI tonight. All that resulted in was XP wigging out about new drivers & explorer.exe crashing. Fun times! :(
update the BIOS to F7g (http://www.gigabyte.com/products/product-page.aspx?pid=2414#bios) first and now try to install Windows 8.
– magicandre1981 – 2012-12-07T11:46:21.690You need to verirfy the problem is not hardware, until you do that, how can we help you? Are these offical disks or homemade burned then the iso when you use the upgrade assistance tool? I had similar problems with the tool when I attempted to upgrade my 32-bit virtual machine. – Ramhound – 2012-12-07T12:00:54.600
@Ramhound: Yeah, I know. I'm sure you can understand my reluctance though. x86/32bit is one I burnt from the download (using MS-unofficial methods) But does work on the other PC, and the x64/64bit one is an ISO that I got from a friend, and burnt - also verified this by using it. – Mark – 2012-12-09T00:05:39.630
@magicandre1981: Thanks, I'll look into that one :) – Mark – 2012-12-09T02:44:09.600
@magicandre1981, you might be on the right track there, I'm thinking that my Mobo doesn't support secure boot in it's current state. - thought I'd note this now in case I never get this thing back online ;) – Mark – 2012-12-10T00:21:39.977
ignore the secure boot warning. Windows works fine without it. – magicandre1981 – 2012-12-10T05:47:19.113