Build your install.wim files in a VM enviroment, they'll be 'hardware independent' and will run on everything regardless of make or model. It takes time, and some real work, but MDT is by far the best way to build boot.wim files. How to Use MDT 2013 to build a boot image to install Windows 7 from WDS Install MDT 2013 and ADK 8.1 There is mass confusion on this issue all around, so please try to remember that boot.wims are created from the WAIK, and you use MDT to push the install.wims. Once you have a boot wim, use WDS to boot to the boot.wim, which will pull the install.wim from the deployment share you build in MDT 2013.
Use the Microsoft Deployment Toolkit in conjuction with the WAIK tools to build a boot disc painlessly, as you're really not supposed to use WAIK all by itself. While a boot.wim file can be created from scratch using just the WAIK alone, you're better off using WAIK+MDT. This will perform an upgrade of your current operating system to Windows 10. If you want to install Windows 10 directly from the ISO file without using a DVD or flash drive, you can do so by mounting the ISO file. Boot.wim files are created with the Windows Automated Installation Kit. Then right-click the ISO file and select Burn disc image. Boot file can be found on any CUCM disk even if. Option 1.2: Extract the boot file from the disk even if the disk is bootable or not. If you don’t have a bootable disk you can also find the file in a non bootable disk also. You can't create a boot.wim file from an install.wim. Go in menu Bootable Extract Boot File from CD/DVD Save the file to your hard drive as a boot info file (bif).