9 times out of 10, that CD/DVD message means your Windows 7 DVD/media is corrupt. Are you using a Dell W7HPx64 DVD, or are you using media you obtained from some place else? This is a very common problem with corrupt downloaded media.
You should be able to eject the DBAN CD/DVD from your DVD drive. The XPS 1645 has a slot design and not the tray. Looking around it seems like the common is problem. I don't know if there is a way to eject the CD/DVD within the BIOS. You can try following this tutorial using cable ties.
You will need to use a new machine to make a bootable USB or DVD. The .iso to USB/DVD should format the USB flash drive however you may want to use the HP Format Tool to format the flash drive first.
However I recommend using one of the USB flash drives from here:
I'm going to go ahead and try formatting the USB drive with the HP tool, re-make the bootable drive and see if it works this time. If it works correctly should I have that "CD/DVD drive device driver is missing" error pop up? What I mean is, does that error mean that the installation is corrupt, or that I just need to find the right driver?
9/10 times it means the media is corrupt. If you cannot install on your hard drive or see your hard drive, it usually means you require a SATA driver.
I have heard of some flash drives not working, but of the dozens of different brands, sizes, types, I've probably used, I've never found one that didn't work for me, and I do nearly all of my Windows 7/Server 2008+ installs via USB.
You should not see the CD/DVD driver message ... there is nothing special about this system's chipset that would justify needing to load a driver for the optical drive (usually SATA, connected to the same controller as the SATA drives).
Then I made a bootable USB. The DVD currently in the computer (Boot and Nuke) won't eject because I wiped everything. So, I guess I'm stuck with USB, do you think I should just try to reformat and re-create the bootable flash drive?
I'm going to go ahead and try formatting the USB drive with the HP tool, re-make the bootable drive and see if it works this time. If it works correctly should I have that "CD/DVD drive device driver is missing" error pop up? What I mean is, does that error mean that the installation is corrupt, or that I just need to find the right driver?
I'll dig up some zip ties and try that trick out for the stuck disc so I can try burning a DVD too.
If that doesn't work I'll try downloading the same .iso file again using a download manager.
I used the HP Format Tool and re-downloaded the .iso file and made sure it was 3.09 gigs (the one I was using before somehow wasn't this size, even though it was the same file number??). Worked like a charm. Thank you so much everybody, this problem was "driving" me nuts. I apologize for the pun.
"re-downloaded the .iso file and made sure it was 3.09 gigs (the one I was using before somehow wasn't this size, even though it was the same file number"
The file got corrupted during the download is why ... but file corruption can happen and end up being the same file size too, which is why the recommendation to download it again. The fact that this is so common is the reason I asked which media you were using ... this seldom, if ever, happens with "official" media.
theflash1932
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November 30th, 2012 20:00
9 times out of 10, that CD/DVD message means your Windows 7 DVD/media is corrupt. Are you using a Dell W7HPx64 DVD, or are you using media you obtained from some place else? This is a very common problem with corrupt downloaded media.
theflash1932
9 Legend
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16.3K Posts
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November 30th, 2012 21:00
Yes, that is a good place to start. You might try a few different things if that doesn't work:
- Download the ISO again
- Use a download manager to ensure the integrity of the download
- Create the USB using a different flash drive, on a different computer, and/or using a different method
- Do a FULL format of the flash drive.
- Burn the ISO to a DVD (DBAN should NOT have disabled the optical drive).
- Order a Dell installation DVD ... it shouldn't be necessary, but ...
support.dell.com/.../backupcd_form
Philip_Yip
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16.1K Posts
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December 1st, 2012 02:00
You should be able to eject the DBAN CD/DVD from your DVD drive. The XPS 1645 has a slot design and not the tray. Looking around it seems like the common is problem. I don't know if there is a way to eject the CD/DVD within the BIOS. You can try following this tutorial using cable ties.
http://techblog.willshouse.com/2012/11/18/dell-studio-xps-cddvd-drive-stuck-solved/
You will need to use a new machine to make a bootable USB or DVD. The .iso to USB/DVD should format the USB flash drive however you may want to use the HP Format Tool to format the flash drive first.
However I recommend using one of the USB flash drives from here:
http://en.community.dell.com/support-forums/software-os/w/microsoft_os/4091.08-recommended-upgrades-for-your-dell-before-a-clean-install-of-windows.aspx
These USB Flash drives have always worked for me.
What .iso did you use? X17-58997?
Philip_Yip
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16.1K Posts
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December 1st, 2012 03:00
9/10 times it means the media is corrupt.
If you cannot install on your hard drive or see your hard drive, it usually means you require a SATA driver.
Check that the .iso file you have is 3.09 GB.
theflash1932
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16.3K Posts
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December 1st, 2012 11:00
I have heard of some flash drives not working, but of the dozens of different brands, sizes, types, I've probably used, I've never found one that didn't work for me, and I do nearly all of my Windows 7/Server 2008+ installs via USB.
You should not see the CD/DVD driver message ... there is nothing special about this system's chipset that would justify needing to load a driver for the optical drive (usually SATA, connected to the same controller as the SATA drives).
ducktimes
6 Posts
0
November 30th, 2012 20:00
Here are some further details. It is refurbished, but I'm not sure if that is relevant.
System Vendor
Manufacturer Dell Inc.
Model Studio XPS 1647
BIOS Information
Vendor Dell Inc.
Version A07
Processor Information
Summary 1 Physical Processors / 2 Cores / 4 Logical Processors / 64 bits
Name Intel(R) Core(TM) i5 CPU M 430 @ 2.27GHz
Vendor GenuineIntel
Original System Clock 133 MHz
Storage Device Information
Disk 0 320.0 GB WDC WD3200BEVT-75A23T0 Western Digital
DVD Writer 0 TSSTcorp DVD+-RW TS-T633C (TSSTcorp DVD+/-RW
TS-T633C) Toshiba Samsung Storage Technology Corporation
Memory Information
Slot 1 DDR3 (PC3-8500F) 2048 MBytes Samsung
Slot 2 DDR3 (PC3-8500F) 2048 MBytes Samsung
Display Adapter Information
ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4670 1024 MBytes
Sound Adapter Information
ATI High Definition Audio Device ATI Technologies Inc.
IDT High Definition Audio CODEC IDT
Network Adapter Information
DW1520 Wireless-N WLAN Half-Mini Card WIRELESS LAN Connected [48 Mbps]
Broadcom NetLink (TM) Gigabit Ethernet WIRED Disconnected
Operating System
Type Windows 7 Home Premium x64
ducktimes
6 Posts
0
November 30th, 2012 20:00
Thanks for the response!!
I downloaded the .iso file from digital river:
en.community.dell.com/.../3316.2-1-microsoft-windows-7-official-iso-download-links-digital-river.aspx
Then I made a bootable USB. The DVD currently in the computer (Boot and Nuke) won't eject because I wiped everything. So, I guess I'm stuck with USB, do you think I should just try to reformat and re-create the bootable flash drive?
ducktimes
6 Posts
0
December 1st, 2012 03:00
I did use the X17-58997 .iso file.
I'm going to go ahead and try formatting the USB drive with the HP tool, re-make the bootable drive and see if it works this time. If it works correctly should I have that "CD/DVD drive device driver is missing" error pop up? What I mean is, does that error mean that the installation is corrupt, or that I just need to find the right driver?
I'll dig up some zip ties and try that trick out for the stuck disc so I can try burning a DVD too.
If that doesn't work I'll try downloading the same .iso file again using a download manager.
Thanks for the tips!
ducktimes
6 Posts
0
December 2nd, 2012 01:00
I used the HP Format Tool and re-downloaded the .iso file and made sure it was 3.09 gigs (the one I was using before somehow wasn't this size, even though it was the same file number??). Worked like a charm. Thank you so much everybody, this problem was "driving" me nuts. I apologize for the pun.
:)
theflash1932
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16.3K Posts
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December 2nd, 2012 08:00
"re-downloaded the .iso file and made sure it was 3.09 gigs (the one I was using before somehow wasn't this size, even though it was the same file number"
The file got corrupted during the download is why ... but file corruption can happen and end up being the same file size too, which is why the recommendation to download it again. The fact that this is so common is the reason I asked which media you were using ... this seldom, if ever, happens with "official" media.
Glad you got it working.
Philip_Yip
9 Legend
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16.1K Posts
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December 3rd, 2012 13:00
Great :)