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Your computer upgraded by itself but is now unable to start.

Your computer upgraded by itself but is now unable to start.

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TheAdamYT
Member
158
02-26-2021, 06:12 PM
#1
I'm involved with Windows 11 insider and suspect the latest update may have caused issues. My PC worked normally for a while before lagging, freezing, and displaying the WHEA_UNCORRECTABLE_ERROR message. After installing Windows via USB with a custom setup, I now have two versions on my C drive and encounter the same error when trying to boot both. I checked hardware by removing the drive from another functioning PC and ruled out physical problems. Any suggestions on preserving data or wiping everything?
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TheAdamYT
02-26-2021, 06:12 PM #1

I'm involved with Windows 11 insider and suspect the latest update may have caused issues. My PC worked normally for a while before lagging, freezing, and displaying the WHEA_UNCORRECTABLE_ERROR message. After installing Windows via USB with a custom setup, I now have two versions on my C drive and encounter the same error when trying to boot both. I checked hardware by removing the drive from another functioning PC and ruled out physical problems. Any suggestions on preserving data or wiping everything?

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strumpan_333
Member
62
03-04-2021, 01:04 AM
#2
Retrieve your files by placing the C drive on a computer with a functional boot drive or OS, then moving to your user directory. (This approach applies only when BitLocker is turned off or you possess the key.) Alternatively, consider a fresh installation to erase faulty setups and start over.
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strumpan_333
03-04-2021, 01:04 AM #2

Retrieve your files by placing the C drive on a computer with a functional boot drive or OS, then moving to your user directory. (This approach applies only when BitLocker is turned off or you possess the key.) Alternatively, consider a fresh installation to erase faulty setups and start over.

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Nevla
Member
207
03-04-2021, 07:02 AM
#3
If you're a Russian Roulette player, you might be puzzled by the fact that you die about once every six tries. A broken boot sector on your drive won't fix the issue, so simply installing new windows there won't work. You need to make a fresh boot drive to reach your existing storage.
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Nevla
03-04-2021, 07:02 AM #3

If you're a Russian Roulette player, you might be puzzled by the fact that you die about once every six tries. A broken boot sector on your drive won't fix the issue, so simply installing new windows there won't work. You need to make a fresh boot drive to reach your existing storage.

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xmen12
Junior Member
22
03-04-2021, 02:20 PM
#4
No, I'm not joining Windows Insider.
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xmen12
03-04-2021, 02:20 PM #4

No, I'm not joining Windows Insider.

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XxPandaxX_74
Member
179
03-04-2021, 10:52 PM
#5
It's a risk, and I won't proceed without a reliable boot backup drive.
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XxPandaxX_74
03-04-2021, 10:52 PM #5

It's a risk, and I won't proceed without a reliable boot backup drive.