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To delete the Ubuntu Partitions:

1.

Go to Start, right click Computer, then select Manage. Then select Disk
Management from the sidebar.
2.
Right-click your Ubuntu partitions and select "Delete". Check before you
delete!
3.
Then, right-click the partition that is on the Left of the free space. Select
"Extend Volume". ...
4.
Done!

To remove Ubuntu, you will need a Windows Recovery CD or Installation CD, or a Ubuntu
Live CD.
Note: If you don't have a Windows Installation or Recovery CD available, you can download
the Windows 7 ISO file (contact Digital River customer support as said in Microsoft help
page). You cannot install Windows without a genuine Purchased Product Key though, as
these ISO files are 100% legal and will only install as an Evaluation copy for 30 days
without a product key.
To remove GRUB:
1.

Grab a Windows recovery media or installation CD and boot from it. You should see
this on arecovery media CD.

And you should see this on an installation media CD. Click "Repair your computer"
and you should see a screen like the first

image.

2.

Open the Command Prompt, then type bootrec /fixmbr into the Command Prompt.

3.

Reboot and boot into Windows. Then follow the steps below to remove the Ubuntu
partitions.
(Images from HowtoGeek)

If you don't have a Windows recovery CD or you are constrained to download and burn the
ISO files mentioned before, you can use Boot-repair. It is a tool that fixes most boot
problems(Windows or Ubuntu). I suggest using a Windows CD if possible.
To use boot repair:
1.

Boot from a Ubuntu live CD or USB

2.

Type these lines in the terminal one line at a time.

3.
4.
5.

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:yannubuntu/boot-repair


sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install boot-repair

6.

Search for Boot-Repair in the Dash and launch it.

To fix your computer with Boot-repair, simply click the "Recommended Repair" button.
Then follow the steps below to remove the Ubuntu Partitions.

To delete the Ubuntu Partitions:


4.

Go to Start, right click Computer, then select Manage. Then select Disk Management
from the sidebar.

5.
6.

Right-click your Ubuntu partitions and select "Delete". Check before you delete!
Then, right-click the partition that is on the Left of the free space. Select "Extend
Volume". Go through the Wizard and Finish

it.
7.

Done!

Another note from Tanner: If you are using an extended partition, you might have to remove
the big extended partition to make the space unallocated.

Universal USB Installer Easy as 1 2 3


Universal USBInstaller aka UUI is a Live Linux USB Creator that allows you to choose from a selection
of Linux Distributions to put on your USB Flash Drive. The Universal USB Installer is easy to use.
Simply choose a Live Linux Distribution, the ISO file, your Flash Drive and, Click Install. Upon
completion, you should have a ready to run bootable USB Flash Drive with your select operating
system installed. Other features include; Persistence (if available) note that casper persistence will
only work with fat16 or fat32 formatted drives.
Universal USB Installer (UUI) Screenshots

Universal-USB-Installer-1.9.6.1.exe June 26, 2015 Changes


Update to support GRML 2014-11, CentOS 7, Runtime Live CD, and Clonezilla 2.4.2-10.

Universal-USB-Installer-1.9.6.1.exeSource Code

MD5: E1380DD9A68923B3768EECB35800B643

Basic Requirements

Changelog
Supported Distros
FAQ
IMPORTANT NOTE: Your USB drive must be Fat16/Fat32/NTFS formatted, otherwise Syslinux will fail and your
drive will NOT Boot.

Bootable USB Flash Drive Creation Requirements:

Universal-USB-Installer-1.9.6.1.exe

Windows XP/Vista/7/8 or WINE to create the USB (Win 98/2K WILL NOT Work!)

*Fat16, Fat32, or NTFS Formatted Flash Drive. MBR partition only GPT will not work!

PC with a BIOS that can boot from USB

Your Favorite Linux ISO

Feel free to inform me of unlisted Live Linux distributions or version revisions, and I will do my best to
update UUI to support them.

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