@glasskuter,
Just so you know, all his disks are MBR types and you are giving instruction for GPT disk type.
The Recovery ID for MBR disk type is 27, not DE94BBA4-06D1-4D40-A16A-BFD50179D6AC
You did not do correctly.
1. After download the ISO, you have to mount it then copy the content to the USB
2. Boot into WinXPE. Double click on This PC to identify which drive your Windows was installed, and which drive is your Windows Installation USB
3. Next, open the command prompt and type...
So It's not the boot problem. Your Windows system component is broken.
Do you have Windows 11 Installation Disk ?. If not you will need to download from...
The last thing we can try is:
- Download DismGUI++ from my google drive: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1M5ZiFkM49__b8grP83-pR7MwqtrBEWsq/view?usp=drive_link
- Unzip to the root of WINXPE then reboot to WINXPE, open This PC, locate Dism++x64.exe then run
- On top screen, You'll see 2 entries...
From your BIOS. You have 2 entries from your Crucial SSD:
P2-CT1000BX...
Windows Boot Manager P2-CT1000BX...
Boot your PC to Boot Menu, select P2-CT1000... To boot from
Hmm, The screen shown winload.efi which is required to boot Windows from GPT disk.
For MBR disk, it should be winload.exe
Did you boot WINXPE with USB without UEFI Prefix ???
- Boot into WINXPE Again
- From Start Menu->All Programs->Administrative Tools then run: Disk Management. Take a...
Here's another freeware: Releases · mikecel79/DISMGUI
Instead of typing long lines of DISM commands, The commands will be constructed and run based on what you want done.
@romiln
I never use Medicat so I can not give you any advice.
chkdsk /r may take a long time to run, so run before you go to bed
You'll be surprised if some, not all installed programs can run by just copy the folder where they were installed to another disk.
Is your PC supported for UEFI-GPT...
What option did you use with chkdsk. option /r will deep run check disk and mark all bad blocks so windows will avoid using them. If you did not use /r then re-run it, else ignore what I said.
Do you have lots of data or software installed in your current Windows ? As far I can tell, we did all...
Shutdown the PC completely, unplug the power then reseat everything: cable, memory, video card ... If you have another cable to connect to the C drive then try that too. With only the C drive connected, remove the USB stick then reboot...
By the way, did you run chkdsk C: /r /f