UDF File System?

Hello,

I have a PC running Windows 10 x64 build 9926.

I wanted to install Win10 on my other machine, so I downloaded the 32-bit version of the same build. The download completed successfully.

Then, I tried to burn the ISO to a disc. (I did exactly the same thing to make my working 64-bit Win10 disc).

But the disk only listing some files with size of 0 bytes.

So I tried another disk, and now I get only one text file which contains the following:

"This disc contains a "UDF" file system and requires an operating system
that supports the ISO-13346 "UDF" file system specification."

I tried different disks, re-downloaded the files, used different OS, used different programs (7-Zip, WinRAR, Nero disc burner, MagicISO...)

with no success.

I searched for solution in the forums but I didn't found one that works.

Now, as I have problems to update my build from 9926 to 10041 using Windows update, so I downloaded the new build in 64-bit (Windows 10 TP March Update ISO)

I have the same problem with the new ISO build.

Can someone help me or knows a solution for that?

Thanks.

Edit: Tried Microsoft Windows USB/DVD Download Tool, no success. Only files with 0 bytes each.

Note that the ISO is actually 3.7GB size.

Edit2: Ubuntu found 1,041 files on the ISO (64-bit build 10041) with size of 88MB, while the ISO itself is 3.7GB.

Also I checked the SHA-1 value from the ISO (32-bit build 9926) and it is different than what is written in Microsoft's download page. I downloaded the same ISO 3 times and they all had the same SHA-1 hash value.

Have you tried using the built in utility to burn the .ISO file to a blank DVD?

http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows7/Burn-a-CD-or-DVD-from-an-ISO-file

or you can simply mount the image and do a build to build upgrade:

How to: do a build to build upgrade using Windows 10 ISO file 

Best,
Andre
twitter/adacosta
groovypost.com

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I think the other system had a UFD DEVICE. You are immediately confronted with a choice. Do you have any data that needs to be saved on that disk, If so copy it somewhere that's safe. Next reformat the disk from to NTFS from another disk. Install the copy you wanted. If you had valuable data on the disk, now is the time to restore it.

Renee

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Hi,

The problem may be that you are trying to download and create 32bit media on a 64bit machine...

I don't know for sure about the newer downloads, but at one time you had to use a 32bit machine to create 32bit media... 64bit machine for 64bit media...

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As I can't mount the image, I can't do a build to build upgrade

And I already tried the built-in utility to burn the ISO file.

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I didn't know that, I'll try it with the 32-bit image.

But I have similar problem with the new 10041 build 64-bit ISO.

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Hi,

Since the last time you were able to burn a useable Windows installation DVD, have you installed anything like an older Nero, Roxio, Sonic, program that has any type of "Packet Writing" feature ?

This is a feature that lets you burn to a CD\DVD as though it was a HDD, and add to it after being used once...

My understanding is that Win 7 used something from Roxio to enable their Send To feature that allowed burning directly to CD\DVD...

Nero called this feature "InCD"... I can't remember the names of the others... These programs can cause a UDF issue... This is a link for an old UDF Reader driver that might help as a last resort...

http://www.roxio.com/enu/support/udf/software_updates.html 

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How about using a flash drive? Saves on a disc, is re-usable. Not to mention it's faster, haven't had any I/O errors either.

  1. Run YUMI: http://www.pendrivelinux.com/yumi-multiboot-usb-creator/
  2. Select Drive, select format to fat32 if it isn't already.
  3. Select Windows Vista/7/8 as the distribution. (Works the same)
  4. Browse to the iso file.
  5. Continue.

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Last updated April 18, 2025 Views 23,731 Applies to: