INACCESSIBLE BOOT DEVICE after Win10 Update

Page 4 of 4 FirstFirst ... 234

  1. Posts : 15
    Win 10 Pro
    Thread Starter
       #31

    Kbird said:
    Sorry Jimbo , I didn't mean to infer your advice was wrong at all , I just see People trying all these complicated fixes without trying the simple stuff like checking the Boot Order in the Bios (Windows Memory Mananger 1st still?) or the Macrium Fix Boot Option 1st.

    I believe there was (is?) an old limit which was 4 Primary Partitions on One disk (MBR?), ( which could be 4 Disks too) you could have as many logical partitions as you wanted ( inside an Extended Partition), if I remember correctly.

    found this at Aomei.....

    The Rules of Partitioning a Hard Drive

    A hard disk drive must be partitioned before you can use it. There are some rules as follows:

    • A maximum of four primary partitions can be created on any MBR hard disk. The limitation of four primary partitions is that when one primary partition is applied to the system the master boot record is structured.
    • There is only one primary partition can be designated as active partition and this partition is used to boot system.
    • BIOS will only recognize the active partition for loading operating system. Other partitions can’t be recognized.
    • To break the limitation of at most 4 primary partitions, you have to create 3 or less primary partitions plus an extended partition and there is only one extend partition.
    ive obviously already made sure bootorder is correct. also there is less volumes than disks, i have 4 hdds split across 2 raids, and two ssds with only one volume (partition) per. (besides recovery partition that windows create on your systemdisk).

    currently copying over files from sysdisk to other disk before proceeding with troubleshooting.
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 2,324
    Win10
       #32

    fullofdespair said:
    ive obviously already made sure bootorder is correct. also there is less volumes than disks, i have 4 hdds split across 2 raids, and two ssds with only one volume (partition) per. (besides recovery partition that windows create on your systemdisk).

    currently copying over files from sysdisk to other disk before proceeding with troubleshooting.
    NO Problem , the advice above was for Jimbo and others.....just thought I'd mention the boot Order as another User hadn't checked in another thread and that was all it was....

    KB
      My Computers


  3. Posts : 15
    Win 10 Pro
    Thread Starter
       #33

    FreeBooter said:
    Let try below troubleshooting option.


    Windows Vista/ 7/8/8.1/10 keep a regular backup of the registry handy in case you need to overwrite a corrupted registry. By default, the RegIdleBackup task runs every 10 days, so that’s as far back as you would lose if you replaced the current registry with the automatically backed-up files. You can find the backed-up registry files in \Windows\System32\config\RegBack folder.


    Please boot your computer with Windows Setup Media and from Windows Recovery Environment start the Command Prompt.

    Please type below command into Command Prompt and press Enter key.

    Code:
     Dir C:\Windows\System32\config\RegBack

    Above command will list files stored within RegBack folder and there file size, make sure files are not zero size if they are do not follow below instructions.



    Please replace partition letter C: with Windows installed partition letter. When computer boots into Windows Recovery Environment (WinRE) environment the drive letter assign to Windows partition may not be C: drive letter because Windows 7, 8 , 8.1 and 10 creates a separate system partition when it's installed from scratch. The system partition contains boot files WinRE assigns the system partition the C: drive letter and the Windows installed partition will be assign any other drive letter usually D: drive letter is assign to Windows installed partition. The Bcdedit /enum | find "osdevice" command can be use to find out the drive letter of the Windows installed partition the output of the Bcdedit command is similar to this osdevice partition=D:. The drive letter after partition= is the drive letter of the Windows partition.

    Please type below commands into Command Prompt and for each command you have typed press Enter key.



    Code:
    Ren  C:\windows\system32\config\SAM         SAM.BAK
    
    Ren  C:\windows\system32\config\SYSTEM      SYSTEM.BAK
    
    Ren  C:\windows\system32\config\SECURITY    SECURITY.BAK
    
    Ren  C:\windows\system32\config\DEFAULT     DEFAULT.BAK
    
    Ren  C:\windows\system32\config\SOFTWARE    SOFTWARE.BAK
    
     
    
    Copy  C:\Windows\System32\config\RegBack\SAM         C:\windows\system32\config
    
    Copy  C:\Windows\System32\config\RegBack\SYSTEM      C:\windows\system32\config
    
    Copy  C:\Windows\System32\config\RegBack\SECURITY    C:\windows\system32\config
    
    Copy  C:\Windows\System32\config\RegBack\DEFAULT     C:\windows\system32\config
    
    Copy  C:\Windows\System32\config\RegBack\SOFTWARE    C:\windows\system32\config

    This procedure assumes that Windows Vista/7/8/8.1/10 is installed to the C:\ partition. Make sure to replace C:\ drive letter to the appropriate Windows OS installed partition drive letter if it is a different location.


    Above commands renames the registry files at their existing location, and then copies the registry files from the RegBack folder to the C:\Windows\System32\Config folder.
    Completed these steps, boot into a BCD bsod with error code 0xc0000098

    sadly i do not have a cd/dvd reader, a spare USB or a spare PC so i cannt obtain a macrium repair thing.



    on a second restart attempt i was back to the inaccessible boot.

    im giving up and reinstalling the entire OS and will forever hate microsoft for bricking my PC with zero penalties. unbelievable they can mess up an update so it bricks peoples pcs and they dont have to pay for it at all.

    corporate controlled politics is shit

    thanks all for trying to help, sadly none of us could rival the gross incompetence of microsoft engineers
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 15
    Win 10 Pro
    Thread Starter
       #34

    this must be a joke.

    i just reinstalled windows and it literally boot into missing BCD. how is that even possible when i made a fresh windows install?!?! what a joke! :@

    edit:

    after a second windows install it now boots. wish me luck with the countless hours of configuring i need to do to get back to where i was before.

    huge thanks to @FreeBooter and the others who tried to help. being willing to help strangers for free shows what great people you are. i wish you happiness and luck in life.
    Last edited by fullofdespair; 22 Jan 2018 at 14:23.
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 2,324
    Win10
       #35

    Did you make sure the Drive was Clean with DiskPart before you reinstalled ? sounds a bit weird for sure...

    Good luck....
      My Computers


  6. Posts : 41,460
    windows 10 professional version 1607 build 14393.969 64 bit
       #36

    For the clean install > install all applicable drivers > install browsers and applications > restore files > allow a few days to generate logs > run this log collector and post a zip for troubleshooting > log collector v2-beta08.zip

    Run HD Tune on the drive:
    http://www.hdtune.com/
    Health (SMART)
    Benchmark
    Full error scan
    Post images of the three tests into the thread.

    Open administrative command prompt and type or copy and paste: chkdsk /x /f /r
    This may take several hours.
    Find the chkdsk report in the event viewer and copy and paste to notepad > save to desktop > post into the thread with one drive or drop box share link
    Read Chkdsk Log in Event Viewer in Windows 10 Performance Maintenance Tutorials
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 5,327
    Windows 11 Pro 64-bit
       #37

    fullofdespair said:
    this must be a joke.

    i just reinstalled windows and it literally boot into missing BCD. how is that even possible when i made a fresh windows install?!?! what a joke! :@

    edit:

    after a second windows install it now boots. wish me luck with the countless hours of configuring i need to do to get back to where i was before.

    huge thanks to @FreeBooter and the others who tried to help. being willing to help strangers for free shows what great people you are. i wish you happiness and luck in life.
    Thank you very much @fullofdespair.

    We are glad to hear your issue has been resolved, thank you for letting us know that all is now well!
      My Computer


 

  Related Discussions
Our Sites
Site Links
About Us
Windows 10 Forums is an independent web site and has not been authorized, sponsored, or otherwise approved by Microsoft Corporation. "Windows 10" and related materials are trademarks of Microsoft Corp.

© Designer Media Ltd
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:52.
Find Us




Windows 10 Forums