F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems This error indicates a problem with unmounting the boot volume.

This error indicates a problem with unmounting the boot volume.

This error indicates a problem with unmounting the boot volume.

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L
Lt_kilowatt
Junior Member
13
09-29-2016, 01:56 AM
#1
I had an ISO file. I attached it to a virtual drive. Once I restarted my laptop, it encountered a BSOD error with the stop code "Unmountable Boot Volume". What should I do to resolve this?
L
Lt_kilowatt
09-29-2016, 01:56 AM #1

I had an ISO file. I attached it to a virtual drive. Once I restarted my laptop, it encountered a BSOD error with the stop code "Unmountable Boot Volume". What should I do to resolve this?

E
ExagonHD
Member
161
09-29-2016, 03:49 AM
#2
Start the Windows installation from the media.
Verify your operating system drive.
E
ExagonHD
09-29-2016, 03:49 AM #2

Start the Windows installation from the media.
Verify your operating system drive.

K
kroko_53
Junior Member
34
09-30-2016, 02:41 PM
#3
Could you clarify if you're asking about an alternative method or a different context? I'm here to help with whatever you need.
K
kroko_53
09-30-2016, 02:41 PM #3

Could you clarify if you're asking about an alternative method or a different context? I'm here to help with whatever you need.

J
Jelly1233
Member
190
10-02-2016, 11:27 AM
#4
An unmountable boot volume indicates a boot issue:
the OS drive is damaged, inaccessible, or failed,
the bootloader is corrupted.
You need to start in a diagnostic setup (such as the Windows installation environment)
and take the necessary actions to figure out what’s wrong.
At the end, you might have to reinstall Windows or replace the drive entirely.
Alternatively, you can bypass diagnostics and simply swap the drive without checking.
J
Jelly1233
10-02-2016, 11:27 AM #4

An unmountable boot volume indicates a boot issue:
the OS drive is damaged, inaccessible, or failed,
the bootloader is corrupted.
You need to start in a diagnostic setup (such as the Windows installation environment)
and take the necessary actions to figure out what’s wrong.
At the end, you might have to reinstall Windows or replace the drive entirely.
Alternatively, you can bypass diagnostics and simply swap the drive without checking.

X
xRawzx
Member
177
10-09-2016, 12:40 AM
#5
I think the virtual drive might be missing after a reboot, which causes the unmountable boot volume BSOD.
X
xRawzx
10-09-2016, 12:40 AM #5

I think the virtual drive might be missing after a reboot, which causes the unmountable boot volume BSOD.

R
RageGlitch
Posting Freak
771
10-09-2016, 04:11 AM
#6
No, it doesn't seem connected to virtual drive at all.
R
RageGlitch
10-09-2016, 04:11 AM #6

No, it doesn't seem connected to virtual drive at all.

R
RamSami
Member
66
10-16-2016, 05:46 AM
#7
OS: Windows 11
BSOD error stop code: "Unmountable Boot Volume"
Attempted fixes included:
- Used USB Windows installation media → startup repair (issue unresolved)
- Opened command prompt and ran bootrec fixboot, rebuildbcd, fixmbr (result: total Windows installations found: 0)
- Launched Notepad and saved as. Displayed only the 16GB pen drive (installation media), not the SSD
- Noted a 512GB SSD is present but not visible in the "save as" dialog
Requesting assistance with a solution that doesn’t require a full Windows reinstall
R
RamSami
10-16-2016, 05:46 AM #7

OS: Windows 11
BSOD error stop code: "Unmountable Boot Volume"
Attempted fixes included:
- Used USB Windows installation media → startup repair (issue unresolved)
- Opened command prompt and ran bootrec fixboot, rebuildbcd, fixmbr (result: total Windows installations found: 0)
- Launched Notepad and saved as. Displayed only the 16GB pen drive (installation media), not the SSD
- Noted a 512GB SSD is present but not visible in the "save as" dialog
Requesting assistance with a solution that doesn’t require a full Windows reinstall

S
sachouille003
Member
50
10-21-2016, 08:56 AM
#8
This is the same subject again!
S
sachouille003
10-21-2016, 08:56 AM #8

This is the same subject again!

S
surfligue
Junior Member
40
11-09-2016, 06:36 AM
#9
Yes, but I'm just updating the status. I've made some adjustments, though a few issues remain unresolved.
Mod Edit:
cmd scan indicates it's installed Windows 0. My system is an ASUS TUF Gaming 15 lap, brand new. The BIOS recognizes my 512GB SSD, but the CMD isn't working as expected.
Please experts help
S
surfligue
11-09-2016, 06:36 AM #9

Yes, but I'm just updating the status. I've made some adjustments, though a few issues remain unresolved.
Mod Edit:
cmd scan indicates it's installed Windows 0. My system is an ASUS TUF Gaming 15 lap, brand new. The BIOS recognizes my 512GB SSD, but the CMD isn't working as expected.
Please experts help

D
DjWisti
Junior Member
5
11-10-2016, 02:04 PM
#10
Verify BIOS settings.
Check if the OS drive is recognized there.
If not found, the drive may be faulty—replace it.
If detected, proceed with further checks.
Start from the Windows installation media and run these commands in Command Prompt (Shift+F10):
diskpart
list disk
select disk 0
list partition
detail disk
list volume
Take a screenshot using your phone camera and share it here.
(Upload to imgur.com and include the link)
D
DjWisti
11-10-2016, 02:04 PM #10

Verify BIOS settings.
Check if the OS drive is recognized there.
If not found, the drive may be faulty—replace it.
If detected, proceed with further checks.
Start from the Windows installation media and run these commands in Command Prompt (Shift+F10):
diskpart
list disk
select disk 0
list partition
detail disk
list volume
Take a screenshot using your phone camera and share it here.
(Upload to imgur.com and include the link)

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