Well, this all seems to be related to a bad ram seating. After removing and re-inserting the Crucial modules multiple times, the laptop has stabilized. To me, that can only mean that there was a connection to the motherboard, but a very poor connection that was prone to failure. I've had...
1 and 2 error out because the WHEA key does not exist.
reg query "HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\WHEA" /v BadPages
ERROR: The system was unable to find the specified registry key or value.
I'll probably run memtest over the weekend since I have 32 gigs and it'll likely take a while.
5 - IMG_9892.jpg - Results of the overnight test
6 - IMG_9893 - 9895.JPG. The computer actually hard locked the first time I ran the wireless tests. 9894 is the screen it locked up on. Everything else seemed OK.
7 - msdt PDF's attached
8 - TBD
I've done that... twice. If the UEFI partition isn't getting updated, then it's the installer failing to do it. Maybe BitLocker is messing with it.
I installed the tools to a USB drive, so I'll try to boot to that tonight and I'll try again.
This ZBook doesn't have the UEFI Diagnostic menu options that you mentioned:
"launch HP UEFI hardware diagnostic > system > extensive > loop until error"
I ran the tests that I thought were relevant: Processor, Memory (quick), System Board. All passed.
Thanks zbook, I will do as instructed.
BTW, if you look at the os-details.txt in my v2 zip file, you'll see that it says:
Name : Microsoft Windows 11 Enterprise|C:\WINDOWS|\Device\Harddisk0\Partition4
Version : 10.0.22621
BuildNumber : 22621
OSArchitecture : 64-bit
I...
It's not Windows 10. This is a literal copy and paste:
Windows 11 Enterprise 64-bit (10.0, Build 22621) (22621.ni_release.220506-1250)
At the risk of sounding rude, you seem to be looking for reasons to not help me. Perhaps someone else might be more inclined to look through the V2 zip file...