I was using an old spare HP Pavilion 570-p0030 desktop pc, Intel 7th Gen CPU, Windows 10 19045.6332 to test Hasleo as an alternate to my Macrium Reflect X. The computer had been working well and I had run the script to enroll in ESU about a week ago. I installed Hasleo Backup Suite Free 5.4.2.3, made a backup to a SK hynix 1 GB Beetle X31 SSD via USB 3. which completed successfully. Then I made the Hasleo Emergency drive on a SanDisk Cruzer Glide 3.0 32 GB flash drive, to try restoring the backup. When I tried to boot to the options menu with ESC key, the computer ran but froze at a Black Screen. Ctrl+Alt+Delete had no effect. Powered off the PC and inserted a Windows 10 19045.6332 boot disk and now it would not boot to that but stayed at black screen with power and fans all on. Then tried to boot direct to Bios with F10 but nothing - the monitor would display its ACER name and the NO Signal and stay black. The backup 1 GB drive was not connected during the above tests.
I opened up the PC, removed CMOS battery, moved CMOS jumper to opposite position and let it sit like that for several hours with no power to the PC. Restored CMOS jumper to proper pins, installed a new CMOS battery, removed and reseated Memory cards. First I then tried to boot to the Crucial 500 GB SSD, still nothing but black screen, fans running. Then tried to boot to the Windows setup flash drive, with the system Crucial 500 GB SSD connected - same results hangs at black screen.. Disconnected Crucial SSD and tried to boot to the Windows setup flash drive with no other drives present - no boot, just black screen. Tried to boot directly to BIOS with F10 - black screen.
Removed the Crucial CT500MX SSD and put it in a Plugable SATA Hard Drive Adapter for testing. Tested attached to my Laptop via USB C port. Looked OK in Disk Management. Tested drive with Hard Disk Sentinel Pro 6.30, including running a surface scan and the drive tests good with Health and Performance excellent. Tested the 32 GB USB 3 flash drive that is the Hasleo emergency boot disk, with Hard Disk Sentinel as well and it reported that the status of the hard disk is unknown and recommended Surface Test, which indicated no surface problems. Crystal Disk Info did not see the Hasleo boot disk, but it shows in File Explorer and looks OK there
Since I can't boot to anything to try to reinstall BIOS or install Windows 10, or even open the Bios, I guess it is time to recycle this one, unless someone has an idea of how to fix it. I have no proof that Hasleo emergency boot disk caused the failure, but I am posting this here just in case anyone else runs into a similar issue. I probably should have posted it on the Windows 10 forum, but I doubt that this was Windows 10 specific, and this Windows 11 forum is the one I follow. I did a quick look in the Hasleo forum and didn't see a similar problem, but I will have to register and post his there.
I opened up the PC, removed CMOS battery, moved CMOS jumper to opposite position and let it sit like that for several hours with no power to the PC. Restored CMOS jumper to proper pins, installed a new CMOS battery, removed and reseated Memory cards. First I then tried to boot to the Crucial 500 GB SSD, still nothing but black screen, fans running. Then tried to boot to the Windows setup flash drive, with the system Crucial 500 GB SSD connected - same results hangs at black screen.. Disconnected Crucial SSD and tried to boot to the Windows setup flash drive with no other drives present - no boot, just black screen. Tried to boot directly to BIOS with F10 - black screen.
Removed the Crucial CT500MX SSD and put it in a Plugable SATA Hard Drive Adapter for testing. Tested attached to my Laptop via USB C port. Looked OK in Disk Management. Tested drive with Hard Disk Sentinel Pro 6.30, including running a surface scan and the drive tests good with Health and Performance excellent. Tested the 32 GB USB 3 flash drive that is the Hasleo emergency boot disk, with Hard Disk Sentinel as well and it reported that the status of the hard disk is unknown and recommended Surface Test, which indicated no surface problems. Crystal Disk Info did not see the Hasleo boot disk, but it shows in File Explorer and looks OK there
Since I can't boot to anything to try to reinstall BIOS or install Windows 10, or even open the Bios, I guess it is time to recycle this one, unless someone has an idea of how to fix it. I have no proof that Hasleo emergency boot disk caused the failure, but I am posting this here just in case anyone else runs into a similar issue. I probably should have posted it on the Windows 10 forum, but I doubt that this was Windows 10 specific, and this Windows 11 forum is the one I follow. I did a quick look in the Hasleo forum and didn't see a similar problem, but I will have to register and post his there.
My Computers
System One System Two
-
- OS
- Windows 11 Pro 22621.2428
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- Home built
- CPU
- Ryzen 7 5800X
- Motherboard
- ASUS TUF Gaming X570-Pro WiFi
- Memory
- 32 GB Crucial 3200 MHz
- Graphics Card(s)
- Nvidia GTX 3060 Ti
- Sound Card
- none
- Monitor(s) Displays
- LG 29UB55 B 29 inch
- Screen Resolution
- 2560 x 1080
- Hard Drives
- Samsung 980 Pro 1 TB NVMe SSD
- PSU
- Seasonic Focus GM650
- Case
- Fractal Design Define 7 Compact
- Cooling
- Noctua NH-U12A CPU Cooler
- Keyboard
- Logitech wireless
- Mouse
- Logitech wireless
- Internet Speed
- 115 Mbps download
- Browser
- Google Chrome with Duck Duck Go search
- Antivirus
- Bitdefender Total Security and Malwarebytes Premium 4.5.11
-
- Operating System
- Windows 11 Pro 22621.2428
- Computer type
- Laptop
- Manufacturer/Model
- ACER Asprire 5 A515-44-R2SA
- CPU
- AMD Ryzen 7 4700U
- Motherboard
- RO Calla_RN
- Memory
- 16 GB
- Graphics card(s)
- none
- Sound Card
- none
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Built in
- Screen Resolution
- 1080
- Hard Drives
- SK hynix Gold P31 NVMe 1 TB
- PSU
- built in
- Case
- included
- Cooling
- stock
- Keyboard
- Logitech K520 wireless
- Mouse
- Logitech M310 wireless
- Internet Speed
- 354 Mbps
- Browser
- Brave
- Antivirus
- Malwarebytes Pro and BitDefender with exceptions and allowed lists. They have been running together for years.




