Hi, it would be wise to check your disk to make sure there's no underlying cause.
E.g. HD Tune - smart parameters, can also do a surface scan (Error scan tab); Hard Disk Sentinel (trial) is very good.
If your disk is ok, you might wish to consider an in-place upgrade repair install rather than wiping everything:
Repair Install Windows 10 with an In-place Upgrade | Windows 10 Tutorials
This
keeps all programs and data and most settings.
You will need an iso of the same build, base language and 'bitness' (x64 or x32) as appropriate- you can use heidoc's tool to get older ones if necessary.
Perhaps an in-place upgrade repair install is what you seek here?
Reset:
From the extensive Tutorial section here:
Reset etc:
Reset Windows 10 | Windows 10 Tutorials
- but it seems your Windows may be corrupt, or your disk faulty, and this fails from what you say.
Clean install
Failing that, you can do a clean install- which (and see tutorial) means deleting all (up to 4) Windows partitions:
Clean Install Windows 10 | Windows 10 Tutorials
You will need to download an iso to do that, freely available.
Download Windows 10 ISO File | Windows 10 Tutorials
Create Bootable USB Flash Drive to Install Windows 10 | Windows 10 Tutorials
Those are the sledgehammer approaches- naturally we don't know what problems you are actually experiencing.
Less drastic approaches start with
a. check the disk
b. run chkdsk c: /scan from an admin command prompt
c. run SFC /SCANNOW from an admin command prompt