Alex had a problem...
Often a Windows system cannot boot (not even to the recovery mode), but the recovery partition on that system will contain the correct WinRE.wim file that can be used to repair that OS.
He wanted to be able to boot to Easy2Boot and then boot to the WinRE.wim recovery file that was on the internal hard disk. That way, he could be sure he was using the correct version of the recovery .wim file for that system. Also, his E2B drive did not need to contain all of the possible Windows install ISO versions that there are in the world!
E2B can directly boot to an NT6 .wim file; you just need to specify the full path of the .wim file.
The problem is that different Windows systems keep the .wim file in different folders.
To further compound the issue, on his Windows 7 systems, the directory name often varied on different systems, e.g.
/Recovery/398cea27-6312- 11e6-a670-10604b8d82a9/WinRe. wim
Often a Windows system cannot boot (not even to the recovery mode), but the recovery partition on that system will contain the correct WinRE.wim file that can be used to repair that OS.
He wanted to be able to boot to Easy2Boot and then boot to the WinRE.wim recovery file that was on the internal hard disk. That way, he could be sure he was using the correct version of the recovery .wim file for that system. Also, his E2B drive did not need to contain all of the possible Windows install ISO versions that there are in the world!
E2B can directly boot to an NT6 .wim file; you just need to specify the full path of the .wim file.
The problem is that different Windows systems keep the .wim file in different folders.
To further compound the issue, on his Windows 7 systems, the directory name often varied on different systems, e.g.
/Recovery/398cea27-6312-