![]() ![]() Step 3: Run Command Prompt as administrator. Step 2: Download Universal USB Installer from. Step 1: Download DBAN (Darik's Boot and Nuke)'s ISO file from SourceForge. Here is the solution that worked for me, tested on a Windows laptop with UEFI and a 64GB USB flash drive. But it still failed to boot when I restarted. So I reformatted my drive to FAT and burned DBAN's ISO to it, all without issue. The good thing about this software was that formatting of the flash drive was now optional during the burning process. But since I would be wiping my hard drive anyway I downloaded it and installed it. It did not seem to be an open-source software so I was a bit wary of it. Next I came across this high-ranking (in Google search results) article from a website called, offering a software download called "Universal USB Installer". I restarted and that unsurprisingly failed to boot. However, when I ran through the burning process again, Rufus insisted to format the entire drive for me, and I could only choose FAT32, not FAT. I ran "clean" in diskpart and reformatted my flash drive with 512MB of space formatted as FAT and the rest unformatted. I moved it to the top of the boot order and tried to boot, but it did not work.Īfterwards, I found this question on Super User, where User:terdon suggested that to make DBAN bootable, the flash drive should be set up with a single FAT partition. In the UEFI, the burned flash drive was shown as " followed by the flash drive's name". However, since the ISO selected in the screenshot was "FreeDOS", the screenshot might be for illustration purpose only. It did not specify which file system should I format the flash drive to during Rufus' burning setup, so I selected FAT32 as shown in the screenshot. Next I tried was a tutorial from Tom's Hardware. I quickly realized that I misread that article because ImgBurn only burned to optical disks. I find DBAN per How-To Geek's recommendation, but I am having trouble installing it on a 64GB USB flash drive and make it bootable on an UEFI-equipped PC.Īfter downloading DBAN's ISO file from SourceForge, I first tried ImgBurn per the recommendation of an earlier How-To Geek article. I need to wipe my Windows laptop's internal hard drive. I haven't noticed anything unusual after the computer has booted.Disclaimer: I am answering my own question. ![]() I found that turning off the computer then turning the computer on its side, or standing it back up again often fixes the problem (temporarily). It may not be related, but for some time my PC has been occasionally failing to boot and when it does this, it emits a series of long beeps. My question is, if I go home from work tonight and run a different version, is it likely to bring the remaining timeframe down from 2564 hours to something a little bit more respectable. I downloaded DBAN from and noticed this morning that it is version 1.0.7 on their site. Options Entropy: Linux Kernel (urandom) PRNG: Mersenne Twister (mt19937ar-cok) Method: Gutmann Wipe Verify: Last Pass Rounds:đ The details from the screenshot are as below: After 7 hours, it had made less than 1% progress on each of my hard drives (2 x WD 250GB). I don't have the exact specs for my PC (although I built it approximately 3 years, maybe a little bit less) using a Gigabyte motherboard and a fairly high clockspeed Intel Duo CPU. ![]() Hi all, I'm using DBAN for the first time and left it running overnight on my PC. ![]()
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