This is the most popular feature for the bootable version. If you are upgrading an old mechanical hard drive to a fast SSD, the bootable ISO allows you to clone the system drive completely, ensuring the new drive is bootable without reinstalling Windows.
Safely upgrade file systems to NTFS to handle individual files larger than 4GB. 3. Copy and Migration Wizards
: Tools to migrate your operating system to a new HDD or SSD. Minitool Partition Wizard Bootable 10.2 Iso
MiniTool Partition Wizard 10.2 is a classic, highly stable release of the popular disk management utility. The "Bootable ISO" version is a standalone disc image file based on the Windows Preinstallation Environment (WinPE).
Typically, disk partitioning tools run directly within your active Windows desktop. However, modifying a system drive while the operating system is actively reading and writing to it can cause errors or require multiple system restarts. This is the most popular feature for the bootable version
Download the MiniTool Partition Wizard Bootable 10.2 ISO file. Step 2: Burn the ISO to a blank CD/DVD using software like ImgBurn or Rufus (in ISO mode). Alternatively, use Rufus or UNetbootin to write the ISO to a USB flash drive (ensuring the target system supports USB boot). Step 3: Insert the bootable media into the target computer. Step 4: Enter the BIOS/UEFI (typically F2, F12, DEL, or ESC during startup) and set boot priority to CD/DVD or USB. Step 5: Save changes and reboot. The system will load MiniTool Partition Wizard automatically.
Click the button next to "Boot selection" and browse to locate your downloaded MiniTool ISO file. Choose the Partition scheme based on your target PC: The "Bootable ISO" version is a standalone disc
: Basic operations like creating, deleting, formatting, and moving/resizing partitions.
: Fully supports exFAT, FAT12/16/32, NTFS, and Ext2/3/4. How to Use the Bootable ISO
Choose for older BIOS systems or GPT for modern UEFI systems. Click Start to format the drive and write the ISO data. Step 2: Boot Into the MiniTool Environment
You can resize or move the system partition (C: drive) more safely when it isn't "live".