F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Windows 10 begins to restart repeatedly due to a repair process.

Windows 10 begins to restart repeatedly due to a repair process.

Windows 10 begins to restart repeatedly due to a repair process.

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heatplayz
Junior Member
17
10-22-2016, 07:26 PM
#1
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heatplayz
10-22-2016, 07:26 PM #1

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BlazedJew
Junior Member
9
10-22-2016, 08:05 PM
#2
Use a Windows installer (Vista, 7, 8, 8.1 or 10) and select the repair my computer option.
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BlazedJew
10-22-2016, 08:05 PM #2

Use a Windows installer (Vista, 7, 8, 8.1 or 10) and select the repair my computer option.

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Ender_Craft47
Posting Freak
866
10-29-2016, 05:08 PM
#3
I would start by removing the CMOS from the motherboard for 30 seconds, place it back, and observe the outcome. If it doesn’t resolve the issue, we can proceed further.
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Ender_Craft47
10-29-2016, 05:08 PM #3

I would start by removing the CMOS from the motherboard for 30 seconds, place it back, and observe the outcome. If it doesn’t resolve the issue, we can proceed further.

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Sunahh
Posting Freak
863
10-30-2016, 07:53 AM
#4
I've already attempted a repair. It managed to start after receiving numerous app malfunction warnings. I planned to restart it multiple times to verify the solution. Now I'm stuck in a BSOD loop—progress is uncertain, but it's moving forward.
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Sunahh
10-30-2016, 07:53 AM #4

I've already attempted a repair. It managed to start after receiving numerous app malfunction warnings. I planned to restart it multiple times to verify the solution. Now I'm stuck in a BSOD loop—progress is uncertain, but it's moving forward.

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Hidekih
Posting Freak
849
11-06-2016, 07:53 AM
#5
CMOS was cleared for over a minute just to ensure safety, resulting in the current display. This has happened before—I'm currently experiencing issues loading my NVMe M.2 boot drive again.
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Hidekih
11-06-2016, 07:53 AM #5

CMOS was cleared for over a minute just to ensure safety, resulting in the current display. This has happened before—I'm currently experiencing issues loading my NVMe M.2 boot drive again.

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SuperClay101
Junior Member
12
11-09-2016, 01:05 AM
#6
Update from @Tristerin and @Guiltyx: I can now manually boot from the drive in BIOS, but it crashes into a BSOD (see attached image). If I let it attempt to start on its own, it opens automatic repair and says it failed. It seems Danish, but I think the 'Stopcode'—CRITICAL PROCESS DIED—indicates something serious is wrong.
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SuperClay101
11-09-2016, 01:05 AM #6

Update from @Tristerin and @Guiltyx: I can now manually boot from the drive in BIOS, but it crashes into a BSOD (see attached image). If I let it attempt to start on its own, it opens automatic repair and says it failed. It seems Danish, but I think the 'Stopcode'—CRITICAL PROCESS DIED—indicates something serious is wrong.

R
Reydam
Junior Member
48
11-09-2016, 04:09 AM
#7
Consider taking all drives off the board except the boot drive. Then restart the computer and see what occurs.
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Reydam
11-09-2016, 04:09 AM #7

Consider taking all drives off the board except the boot drive. Then restart the computer and see what occurs.

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102
11-09-2016, 04:34 AM
#8
Sorry for the slowdown! I attempted to delete other drives but still encountered BSOD during Windows startup. I’ve tried several solutions so far. Using the system recovery tool with sfc in cmd helped—no integrity issues reported, but remove function and quality updates didn’t work. Restoring from a previous state also failed. I ran memtest without success, as some warn it’s not very dependable. Right now, the only option that comes to mind is a clean install, since I can’t even boot into Windows anymore. It seems the Windows files are severely damaged or my system is completely broken.
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lookatmyskill2
11-09-2016, 04:34 AM #8

Sorry for the slowdown! I attempted to delete other drives but still encountered BSOD during Windows startup. I’ve tried several solutions so far. Using the system recovery tool with sfc in cmd helped—no integrity issues reported, but remove function and quality updates didn’t work. Restoring from a previous state also failed. I ran memtest without success, as some warn it’s not very dependable. Right now, the only option that comes to mind is a clean install, since I can’t even boot into Windows anymore. It seems the Windows files are severely damaged or my system is completely broken.

Z
Zam_GM
Member
158
11-13-2016, 05:43 PM
#9
The command shows no Windows installs found, but it doesn’t necessarily mean the installation is completely broken. It could indicate missing files or a corrupt setup.
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Zam_GM
11-13-2016, 05:43 PM #9

The command shows no Windows installs found, but it doesn’t necessarily mean the installation is completely broken. It could indicate missing files or a corrupt setup.