F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Error encountered on motherboard during Windows update process

Error encountered on motherboard during Windows update process

Error encountered on motherboard during Windows update process

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ChistenLooter
Junior Member
5
02-03-2025, 03:52 AM
#1
Hello everyone, I’m facing a problem with my computer during a Windows update. The system won’t restart properly and the motherboard displays a 0D error code that persists until a hard reset. It happens mainly during updates but also occasionally when I manually restart it. My setup includes: Asrock X670E Taichi, AMD R9 7950X, 3D 64GB DDR4, Dominator® PLATINUM 60000MT/SP, Expo EVGA RTX 3080, 12GB Corsair HX850, custom loop cooling, one Inland SSD, two Seagate Iron Wolf drives, Windows 11 Pro. The PC isn’t overclocked except for the EXPO RAM setting, and both BIOS and Windows are up to date. I mainly use it for photo/video editing and light gaming; it handles heavy tasks smoothly, including several hours of gaming without overheating. Here’s what I’ve tried: checked manual, updated BIOS, reset BIOS to defaults, adjusted RAM locations, verified power cables, ran stress tests (3DMark, OCCT, Memtest), restarted overnight, and removed unnecessary software. Only one stick of RAM was installed. It’s tough to identify a hardware issue since the system works well in all applications. Anyone have ideas on how to resolve this and reduce downtime after updates? Thanks a lot!
C
ChistenLooter
02-03-2025, 03:52 AM #1

Hello everyone, I’m facing a problem with my computer during a Windows update. The system won’t restart properly and the motherboard displays a 0D error code that persists until a hard reset. It happens mainly during updates but also occasionally when I manually restart it. My setup includes: Asrock X670E Taichi, AMD R9 7950X, 3D 64GB DDR4, Dominator® PLATINUM 60000MT/SP, Expo EVGA RTX 3080, 12GB Corsair HX850, custom loop cooling, one Inland SSD, two Seagate Iron Wolf drives, Windows 11 Pro. The PC isn’t overclocked except for the EXPO RAM setting, and both BIOS and Windows are up to date. I mainly use it for photo/video editing and light gaming; it handles heavy tasks smoothly, including several hours of gaming without overheating. Here’s what I’ve tried: checked manual, updated BIOS, reset BIOS to defaults, adjusted RAM locations, verified power cables, ran stress tests (3DMark, OCCT, Memtest), restarted overnight, and removed unnecessary software. Only one stick of RAM was installed. It’s tough to identify a hardware issue since the system works well in all applications. Anyone have ideas on how to resolve this and reduce downtime after updates? Thanks a lot!

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benjfifi
Junior Member
44
02-03-2025, 03:52 AM
#2
0D often means the CPU isn't recognized on most other motherboards you use. However, since your system boots after a hard restart, the problem seems more like a temporary glitch. Based on my experience with boards that refuse to reboot, it might relate to fast boot or memory context issues. Try turning off fast boot in both Windows and the BIOS, then disable MCR to check if the issue continues.
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benjfifi
02-03-2025, 03:52 AM #2

0D often means the CPU isn't recognized on most other motherboards you use. However, since your system boots after a hard restart, the problem seems more like a temporary glitch. Based on my experience with boards that refuse to reboot, it might relate to fast boot or memory context issues. Try turning off fast boot in both Windows and the BIOS, then disable MCR to check if the issue continues.

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Jelmer2006
Junior Member
10
02-03-2025, 03:52 AM
#3
It's noteworthy. I turned off fast boot in Windows, BIOS, and MCR. I'll check again to see if the problem continues. It's surprising it doesn't seem like a CPU issue since everything appears normal.
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Jelmer2006
02-03-2025, 03:52 AM #3

It's noteworthy. I turned off fast boot in Windows, BIOS, and MCR. I'll check again to see if the problem continues. It's surprising it doesn't seem like a CPU issue since everything appears normal.

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gymclo6
Member
187
02-03-2025, 03:52 AM
#4
You should see a noticeable rise in boot duration when fast boot and MCR are turned off. Boot times typically jump from around 20 seconds to over 80 seconds as expected.
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gymclo6
02-03-2025, 03:52 AM #4

You should see a noticeable rise in boot duration when fast boot and MCR are turned off. Boot times typically jump from around 20 seconds to over 80 seconds as expected.