F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems System restarts occur, booting into UEFI mode.

System restarts occur, booting into UEFI mode.

System restarts occur, booting into UEFI mode.

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LeafSceptile
Junior Member
4
09-04-2016, 05:01 PM
#1
I've just replaced all storage drives with a new SSD and HDD, but now Windows 10 restarts after a few minutes and jumps straight into BIOS. The Boot Order only shows UEFI or Disabled. I've tried resetting and refreshing the PC, but nothing worked. The only way in is via the power button shutdown. I've checked the SSD connections and re-seated them—any suggestions?
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LeafSceptile
09-04-2016, 05:01 PM #1

I've just replaced all storage drives with a new SSD and HDD, but now Windows 10 restarts after a few minutes and jumps straight into BIOS. The Boot Order only shows UEFI or Disabled. I've tried resetting and refreshing the PC, but nothing worked. The only way in is via the power button shutdown. I've checked the SSD connections and re-seated them—any suggestions?

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Samedwin
Junior Member
4
09-19-2016, 05:24 PM
#2
reinstall windows?
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Samedwin
09-19-2016, 05:24 PM #2

reinstall windows?

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69
09-20-2016, 05:26 AM
#3
It's a Windows 10 upgrade from version 8.1, but I don't have access to the 8.1 drive or a bootable installation media.
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NarwhalGamings
09-20-2016, 05:26 AM #3

It's a Windows 10 upgrade from version 8.1, but I don't have access to the 8.1 drive or a bootable installation media.

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WiFlayer
Junior Member
45
09-20-2016, 09:56 AM
#4
You can perform a clean install directly to Windows 10. Ensure you have the key or linked it to your Microsoft account. This is likely the best approach, suggesting the OS might be corrupted. You can use Rufus or Media Creation Tool to create a Win10 USB drive immediately.
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WiFlayer
09-20-2016, 09:56 AM #4

You can perform a clean install directly to Windows 10. Ensure you have the key or linked it to your Microsoft account. This is likely the best approach, suggesting the OS might be corrupted. You can use Rufus or Media Creation Tool to create a Win10 USB drive immediately.

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Marcoooo
Junior Member
18
09-20-2016, 06:22 PM
#5
I've repeated the formatting steps for both USB and SSD, encountering the 80070002 error during Windows installation. This issue appears linked to corrupt files. Formatting via Disk Management, DiskPart, and right-click format hasn't resolved the problem. Anyone else experienced this and found a solution outside of formatting?
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Marcoooo
09-20-2016, 06:22 PM #5

I've repeated the formatting steps for both USB and SSD, encountering the 80070002 error during Windows installation. This issue appears linked to corrupt files. Formatting via Disk Management, DiskPart, and right-click format hasn't resolved the problem. Anyone else experienced this and found a solution outside of formatting?

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DaLuZshow
Member
200
09-28-2016, 06:05 AM
#6
Do you have an alternative drive to consider? It's possible the issue lies with that specific drive.
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DaLuZshow
09-28-2016, 06:05 AM #6

Do you have an alternative drive to consider? It's possible the issue lies with that specific drive.

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redjewel
Member
73
09-29-2016, 08:28 AM
#7
you use the disc image recovery tool because these discs hold your personal operating system in active condition. if you hadn’t upgraded to Windows 10 and made a fresh recovery bundle (possibly with Blu-ray), these drives could hold many DVDs—your current drive’s image. the tool is typically located in system recovery settings.
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redjewel
09-29-2016, 08:28 AM #7

you use the disc image recovery tool because these discs hold your personal operating system in active condition. if you hadn’t upgraded to Windows 10 and made a fresh recovery bundle (possibly with Blu-ray), these drives could hold many DVDs—your current drive’s image. the tool is typically located in system recovery settings.

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benjfifi
Junior Member
44
09-29-2016, 10:16 AM
#8
I'll attempt that now. The unusual issue is the persistent 100MB of unused disk space when formatted. I'm uncertain about your intent, but I don't have an optical drive or a Windows 8 DVD copy.
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benjfifi
09-29-2016, 10:16 AM #8

I'll attempt that now. The unusual issue is the persistent 100MB of unused disk space when formatted. I'm uncertain about your intent, but I don't have an optical drive or a Windows 8 DVD copy.

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shadowbacca
Member
226
10-05-2016, 12:20 PM
#9
windowskey & w create recovery drive winkey & x click file recovery create system image this create a thumb drive or your recovery partition on hdd then full version system restore of the OS at current state those of you with nas note theres network option for where to put image (localhdd dvd network)
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shadowbacca
10-05-2016, 12:20 PM #9

windowskey & w create recovery drive winkey & x click file recovery create system image this create a thumb drive or your recovery partition on hdd then full version system restore of the OS at current state those of you with nas note theres network option for where to put image (localhdd dvd network)