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I'm really at loss. Your script for PS returns SerialNumber in hex-encoded and flipped subject. I ran WMI on Win81, Win7 and WinXP. There is Hex representation in Win81 but not in Win7 and WinXP.The property is available in Win7 and WinXP.I suspect WMI is exposing values as a boolean. Another possibility is that WMI simply returns information the same way as does HDINFO. Fact is, in case of Win81 and Win7 it's not an accurate HD serial number. It's a primary serial number, it's usually used in RAID configuration. However, it's incorrect when you don't have such a raid device (HDD). When you don't have RAID on IDE drive, or an SCSI drive (Wish this were the case today instead of that fancy RAID scheme! But hey, that's just me).Check this image: In an image like that, numbering 114 is what a drive recognized as SCSI ID. If you have a RAID device by itself, the device will number as 209, 210 or 211, depending on the RAID level. As you open HDINFO, you will see that the Master Serial Number is below the Primary Master Model or Master Controllers.So, you can get corresponding S/N using HDINFO:get hardisk serial number in vb.net jrv, HDINFO is a PS script launcher. I'm doing everything in shell script. So, HDINFO isn't required. I'm merely pointing it out. Of course, if it's more convenient and you just want to run HDINFO you can do that. It's invoked the same way. Just append `` to the end of the command and it will run HDINFO on the specified directory. d2c66b5586