A CCBoot image is a virtual disk file (typically in .vhd or .vhdx format) that contains the operating system, drivers, and configuration settings for your client computers. Instead of each PC having its own physical hard drive, they all "pull" this image from a central server over the local network (LAN). 1. Preparing the Master PC

You can boot the image on "Hardware A," install drivers, save it, then boot the same image on "Hardware B" and install those drivers. CCBoot’s PnP management tool handles the rest. 4. Optimization Tips for Peak Performance

Set the Windows pagefile to a fixed size or offload it to the CCBoot "Write-Back" disk to save image space.

Check your Server’s SSD health and ensure you are using a Gigabit (or 10Gb) switch.

When you need to update a game or install a new app, put one PC into "Superclient" mode. Any changes made in this mode are saved directly back to the master image. 5. Troubleshooting Common Image Issues

This often happens if the "CCBoot Driver" wasn't installed correctly before uploading.

Install the CCBoot client application on your Master PC.

Only install essential drivers (NIC, Chipset, GPU). Avoid bloated software that slows down boot times.