

And the solution involves using Windows itself. 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 I have even seen articles suggesting to use rsync! Come on, if I want to install windows, I definitely do not want to resort to Rsync.Some convoluted methods that require me to use diskutil either from the command line or from the UI, also no luck.Using software utilities like UNetbootin, highly discouraged by Apple with some scary warnings, from doing so, also didn’t work for me.I was able to create the USB stick but it wouldn’t boot on my new PC. Not only you need to have an old version of Macos X for this to work, but even if you do have one, at least in my case, it didn’t work.


I tried every different method described on the world wide web and all failed. How To Create Windows 10 Bootable USB Flash Drive Via CMD | Make Flash Bootable Nothing worked for me
