Create Bootable Iso Using Imgburn

Creating a bootable iso image with Imgburn. The file you enter must be the image of the floppy disk or the hard disk. This means: The file must contain the boot sector (bootf02) in the first 512 bytes and the kernel.bin data somewhere else. Where exactly the kernel.bin file is located within the image file depends on the boot sector. Make bootable Windows ISO from installation files. NOTE: This method is applicable to Windows 10, 8.1 and 7 versions. In this guide, I will show you how you can create a bootable Windows 7/8.1/10 ISO image file from Windows installation files.

This guide will walk you through burning an ISO image to a CD or DVD with the free (and excellent) ImgBurn. You can use this guide to burn just about any CDs, including our Windows recovery discs (or download Easy Recovery Essentials directly from here).

Can’t get the burned CD to boot?
If you’re having trouble getting this CD to boot after burning it according to the instructions on this page, check out our guides on setting up your PC to boot from the CD/DVD correctly and troubleshooting problems booting from CD.

Contents

Getting Started

Before you continue, you’ll need a blank CD and five minutes to spare.

Download and Install

Simply click on this link to download and run ImgBurn: ImgBurn.exe

Burning an ISO Image

Now to get started burning your ISO file. Open up ImgBurn and the first thing you see is a nice splash screen as the program loads.

You’ll see a nice selection menu from where you choose which operation you wish to do with ImgBurn. Select the top left option, “Write image file to disc” as shown below:

From here you get the main selection menu as shown below:

Now this is the main window for ImgBurn, and despite all the text and controls, it’s fairly easy to use. From here you select the file you wish to burn with clicking on the browse folder icon. This will bring up the file browser in which you use to lead the application to the ISO file you wish to burn:

Now after selecting the file, the window will update to display your selection.

Here you will select the burn speed and if you wish to have the disc get verified, which you should select. Verification will double-check that what’s written to disc is identical to the ISO file you have, in order to prevent issues caused by bad CDs, glitches in the burn process, and more. If the verification fails, burn it again with a lower speed setting.

Create Bootable Cd From Iso With Imgburn

To begin burning the image to the CD, click the large button/image at the bottom-left (the illustration of a file being transferred to a CD).

After it burns you will see a confirmation dialog like the one below. At this point, you can close the application and continue.

Create Bootable Iso Using Imgburn

Troubleshooting

If the ImgBurn software gives you any errors or the resulting CD is not correctly burned/bootable/usable, read on for possible resolution options.

If you experience any error messages during the CD burning process, try the following in the order below:

  • Retry the burn at the slowest speed (either 1x or 2x). CD burning can be a whimsical and frail operation, burning at the slowest speed possible usually resolves most issues.
  • If you’re attempting to write the ISO image to a CD-RW (erasable, rewritable CD), try again with a regular single-use CD-R.
  • If you’re burning to a DVD±R, try burning to a CD-R instead. If you’re burning to a CD-R and your PC supports writing to DVD discs, trying burning to a DVD±R disc instead.1
  • Try the burn with a different brand of CD-R media, some of the cheaper brands are not fully compatible with all CD-writing software.
  • Try using a different program to burn the CD and see if it gives you a different error message. For example, follow our guide on burning CDs with ActiveISO instead.
  • Try the burn from a different PC, if you have access to one.

Imgburn Create Iso From Usb

Finishing Up

Congratulations, you’re all done. That wasn’t so hard now, was it?

Create Bootable Iso Using Imgburn Windows 10

If you’ve followed the above instructions but still can’t get your PC to boot from the CD, check out our guides on setting up your PC to boot from the CD/DVD correctly and troubleshooting problems booting from CD.

Create Bootable Iso File With Imgburn

  1. An optical drive that supports both CD and DVD discs actually contains two separate lasers, one for each. In such combo drives, especially in laptops, it is common for one of the read/write lasers to fail, leaving only the other working. ↩