

- #BOOT WINDOWS ON MAC NO USB HOW TO#
- #BOOT WINDOWS ON MAC NO USB LICENSE KEY#
- #BOOT WINDOWS ON MAC NO USB INSTALL#
- #BOOT WINDOWS ON MAC NO USB WINDOWS 10#
- #BOOT WINDOWS ON MAC NO USB PRO#
You are only installing Windows on your Mac to create a USB stick install of Windows 10. Don’t enter it yet! The install process will work without the license key.
#BOOT WINDOWS ON MAC NO USB LICENSE KEY#
You will be asked to enter a license key during the install process. Once you click install, Bootcamp will start the installation process for you.

#BOOT WINDOWS ON MAC NO USB WINDOWS 10#
You can increase and decrease the size of your Windows 10 Partition with the slider, but the minimum partition size allowed for Windows is 64GB. Make sure you don’t let more than 24h elapse, as the download will expire.Īfter you finish the download, start Bootcamp. Download Windows 10 ISOĭownload the Windows ISO from. In theory, 100GB of space should be enough. In my case, Bootcamp reserved 64GB for the windows partition. Prerequisitesīefore you can start, you will need to have plenty of disk space available on your Mac to make some space for the Windows Partition. And at the end, you can delete the Windows partition and reclaim the space again for use on your Mac. Hang on, how can we use Windows to install Windows if we don’t have windows? Installing Windows on a Mac using BootcampĮven though it might seem counter-intuitive to install Windows on a Mac just to create a Windows 10 install on a USB stick, this was the simplest solution I could find. And the solution involves using Windows itself.
#BOOT WINDOWS ON MAC NO USB HOW TO#
There is a much easier way! How to create a USB stick to install Windows from WindowsĪfter all this struggle I realized that there must be an easier way to create a USB stick to install Windows from a Mac. To make FAT32 work you need to split the file which is bigger than 5GB into chunks under the file size limit. However, my BIOS will not boot from a USB flash drive formatted with ExFAT. Some of the solutions to this problem propose using ExFAT instead, as it accepts file sizes above 4GB. The latest Windows 10 install has a file with 5GB, so if you try to copy the install files to a USB stick, it will fail because one file is over 4GB size. The main reason why it is so hard to create a Windows USB stick from a Mac has to do with file size limits on the FAT32 file system(4 GB). Why is it so hard to create a USB stick to install Windows 10
#BOOT WINDOWS ON MAC NO USB PRO#
I must say Windows 10 is very nice and simple to use after decades of hating Windows with a passion I actually enjoy using it, albeit only on a Mac and my Mac Pro cylinder runs Steam and the likes of GTA V very well indeed.

The easiest by far was a new Mac Pro cylinder which literally did everything unattended up to where the Windows welcome screen takes over. All good fun but not one Mac I used was the same procedure. This I cured by actually removing the partition Boot Camp had created using Terminal and allowing Windows to see a area of 'free space' which it then formatted correctly and went well after that. Each Mac seems to have different methodologies and some such as my Mac mini 2012 failed at the last stage due to an EFI issue according to the Windows installation setup. I've added Boot Camp and Windows 10 to a whole bunch of Macs ranging in age I would add that a MacBook Pro 2010 cannot use an iso insisting on using an optical disk.
