I could try redownload the specific file with NUS downloader and delete the right file of priiloader and rename the wii menu to the original name.
You don't need to redownload the specific file with NUSD, unless.... you edited your real NAND instead of the SD card NAND dump?
you need to delete the priiloader from the dump, not from NAND.
Priiloader is renaming the system menu .app (by renaming "0" to "1" on the first letter), and install itself with the original name of the system menu.
when the console loads the system menu, it's actually priiloader which is loaded (silently, unless you press reset), which then loads the renamed file sysmenu.
so, what you want is to keep priiloader on NAND (for brick protection), but delete it from your dump (not really needed on neek.... but shouldn't be an issue, is it?)
You should maybe just make a new NAND dump ?
or you can use NUSD to get the app without packing to wad
or you can just get the app from your NAND (with wiixplorer? or FTPii)
Personally I would just to a new full NAND dump, because I don't know what happened while you waited 50 min...
I installed sneek with disc. Is it normal that it take so long to boot? I'm now waiting 50 minutes.
"with disc" you mean you enabled the "+di" option ?
Please, don't !
at least not on first boot.
DI (disc interface emulation/redirection) requires at least one extracted disc to be present on your SD card, or neek will not boot.
So, again, I would :
1. remove (or temporarily rename) di.bin from sneek folder
2. make a new NAND dump, on SD preferably due to lot of HDD setup restrictions.
I guess you'd prefer uneek (to put your wbfs on usb), but try sneek first! then try usb, then try +di !
3. delete priiloader from NAND dump, if you want (unsure if it's a problem, I don't have it installed on my Wii)
4. run neek sysmenu without autobooting any game (if using neek2o) the first time to be sure everything works
then you can try with di, but you'll need an extracted disc in the /games/ folder
I think neek2o removed that requirement.
It's taking 5min to boot neek if you created a clean new incomplete NAND from modmii, generating missing files.
it's
not taking 5mins if the EmuNAND already contains all the required files, is already setup, or is a full dump from your NAND.
t's kinda confusing to get everything set up, but it makes sense once you do it.
The most confusing part is probably generating the neek's kernel.bin file, because it's based on an official IOS it can't be shared so you need to do it yourself.
but the way neek works is quite simple, it's just loading one file (that kernel.bin) and rebooting the console to redirect all NAND access to your full NAND copy on SD or USB.
the console doesn't even know it's redirected, so you use real IOS (not cIOS), no USBLoaders but the official Disc Channel instead.
ah, also it can be confusing that most guides are based on nswitch and bootmii method, which is hard to understand the boot procedure. both Sneek and Uneek are always booting from SD when using bootmii (bootmii is hardcoded to loads sd:/bootmii/armboot.bin), even when you need Uneek.
so you need to always (re)generate either sneek and uneek boot files, and respectively copy the proper version to SD or SD+USB.
But with USBGX it's a lot easier, you can have both at the same time and you don't need armboot.bin anymore. it's not using bootmii at all and directly loads the kernel in memory.
you generate sneek's kernel.bin, put it on sd:/sneek/
you generate uneek's kernel.bin, put it on usb:/sneek/
keep the di.bin for later if you want to load game disc instead of channels. if you need, just put that file in the folder.
1. full NAND dump
2. sd:/sneek/kernel.bin and/or usb:/sneek/kernel.bin
3. loads Neek sysmenu (usbgx select the path to kernel based on location of your emuNAND folder, SD or USB)
4. reset/shutdown to exit neek.
if you use neek2o, you can even autoboot channels, and auto-exit neek on game exit and return to real NAND. if you have priiloader properly setup you can return directly to usbgx.
it only takes longer to boot/exit the game, but you should use neek only for problematic games, not as your main setup.