Clean Install Windows 7 with Upgrade Media: The Answer

I was so hoping to have better news to share, but with all the conflicting reports and my own troubles testing this while on the road, it's been a messy 24 hours. However, after staying up late last night and working through a few different scenarios, I think I do have a (fairly) simple way to clean install Windows 7 with Upgrade media. That is, it should be easier than the old "install it twice" hack that I previously documented for Vista (though that should still work as well).

Put simply, the goal here is to clean install Windows 7 on a virgin, unused PC. You can boot and run Setup with the Upgrade media for Windows 7, but when you go to activate, it won't work.

Thanks to Kevin Fisher and a bit of testing, I have a simple workaround that does work.

After performing the clean install, ensure that there are no Windows Updates pending that would require a system reboot. (You'll see an orange shield icon next to Shutdown in the Start Menu if this is the case).

Then, open regedit.exe with Start Menu Search and navigate to:

HKLM/Software/Microsoft/Windows/CurrentVersion/Setup/OOBE/

Change MediaBootInstall from "1" to "0".

Open the Start Menu again and type cmd to display a shortcut to the Command Line utility. Right-click this shortcut and choose "Run as administrator." Handle the UAC prompt.

In the command line window, type: slmgr /rearm

Then tap ENTER, close the command line window and reboot. When Windows 7 reboots, run the Activate Windows utility, type in your product key and activate windows.

Voila!

A couple of notes here.

Others have reported that simply installing Windows 7 using Upgrade Media and then activating just works. It certainly doesn't hurt to try this, but my guess is that there was a version of Windows on the hard drive that Setup detected, thus making the install and activation work properly.

I have not tested this yet, but I assume if you launch Setup from within your previous version of Windows, choose Custom, reboot, and then wipe out the previous Windows version during Setup, that that will work as well.

And I'm just about positive that the old "install twice" hack from Vista will work too.

I will test all of this thoroughly when I get home. But for now I wanted to cut through the baloney and cut and paste jobs out there and give you something that really does work.

Again, thanks very much to Kevin for this information.

Discuss this Article 110

Dipsh t Admin
on Oct 23, 2009
"A down quarter and nothing mentioned here? " A down quarter, but they still made money. "It looks like the reports of day long Windows 7 installs are rolling in." 20 minutes, plus installing some apps BTW, LOTS of complaints here about SL, many going back to Leopard. Hmm. http://www.mac-forums.com/forums/os-x-operating-system/164476-share-your...
evgenij
on Oct 23, 2009
Don't feed the trolls before or after midnight.
whiplash55
on Oct 23, 2009
Windows 7 set record for 1 day sales ar Amazon surpassing the last Harry Potter book. I'm sure it'll pass Leopard by Monday.
Avro
on Oct 23, 2009
@ Dipsh t Admin You should read your link before posting. Questions are about whether to buy the family pack or not and how to place your order. Snow Leopard went super on our 4 Intel Macs. Contrast that with the 5 hours trying to install Windows 7 with the student download. Silly error messages and then it would not install over XP. Upon downloading from the Microsoft Student Website, I get 3 files. These are: Win7-P-Retail-en-us-x64.exe setup1.box setup2.box I double click on "Win7-P-Retail-en-us-x64.exe" and I get the message "Unloading the Box". Once the status bar reaches the end, I get the following error: "We are unable to create or save new files in the folder in which this application was downloaded. Please check the folder properties to make sure that you have security permission on the folder to write files and that the folder is not read-only". I click on OK. Regardless of the fact that I received the above error message, I now have a new folder called "expandedSetup". Within this folder are lots and lots of complicated looking files, stored within many other sub folders. However, in the root of "expandedSetup" is a file called "setup.exe". I double click on this file, and I get the following error message: "The version of this file is not compatible with the version of Windows you're running. Apparently refunds are now being offered. I am getting one. http://www.sevenforums.com/installation-setup/31093-digital-river-refund...
fred001
on Oct 23, 2009
Heavens to Murgatroyd! This regedit doohacky is totally awesome! I'm surprised that Microsoft would let Thurrott post this stuff without yelling at him. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ULcQ4DNHOWo
anonymous
on Oct 24, 2009
I was so hoping to have better news to share, but with all the conflicting reports and my own troubles testing this while on the road, it's been a messy 24 hours. However, after staying up late last night and working through a few different scenarios
gadfly10
on Oct 24, 2009
So, by Paul's own admission, a Windows 7 installation experience includes "a messy 24 hours" ,"being up all night" --and a registry hack. Heh, heh, what was that song? Oh yeah, "It's the final countdown....."
gadfly10
on Oct 24, 2009
Windows 7 set a record all right... zero to registry hack in under 24 hours!
menlotechnical
on Feb 28, 2011
UPDATE 2/28/11: Just a head’s up- there is a anti-registry hack Microsoft patch called KB971033 which was designed to ‘repair registry tampering for activation’. If you follow the rules within your post, consider viewing each patch bundle before starting the Windows Update INSTALL. If you see the patch for KB971033, 1) uncheck it and then 2) HIDE it to get the Windows Update shield to turn Green. You need to do patch hide before you attempt Method #2.
I have performed this install with Upgrade Family Pack Home Premium media on no less than a dozen systems originally shipping with an OEM version of XP and Vista, clean custom install in Windows 7, and your Method #2 will work.
If you already allowed the patch to install, there is a great write up on Geekmontage reviewing some alternatives. “How to UNINSTALL Windows 7 Activation Update: KB971033 and REACTIVATE with SP1?
The link to this is tinyurl dot com slash gmontage971033


kunruh
on Jan 2, 2012
Method #2 worked for me :) Thank you! However, I'm curious if it would be a good idea to change the registry value back to 1 or not? Would it cause problems to leave it as 0?

Please or Register to post comments.

IT/Dev Connections

Las Vegas
September 30th - October 4th

Paul ThurottYou'll have the opportunity to experience:
• 120 Technical
Sessions
• Networking with Peers
• Expert Speakers


Come See Paul Thurrott & Mary Jo Foley in Person!

Register Now

Office 365 InfoCenter

Get the latest insight and info from Paul

Read Now!

What I Use