Computer crashes during automatic repair, computer stuck in reboot loop

responsibefather

Reputable
Dec 12, 2014
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The other day my computer randomly shut-off for some reason right as I opened a game. Since then I have been unable to get past automatic repair on my computer as it just constantly reboots itself forever. I can access my bios and boot menu, but that's about it. I fiddled around with things in the bios for awhile but nothing changed. I downloaded a fresh copy of windows 10 to a disc and have been trying to do things like startup repair, system restore, and others but none of them have worked. I messed around in command prompt for awhile and was encountered with errors that prevented me from fixing things I guess? I've done the bootrec repair things and they all go through except one part. I'm not sure how to continue with these messages appearing. My next step is probably just to wipe the hard drive clean and start anew. Any help would be appreciated. I've included a URL of some pictures below of my main issues.

https://imgur.com/a/8kCyz

(if these matter here or not)
Specs:
Intel i7 4790k 4.0 CPU
GTX 970 (SC) 4GB GDDR5 GPU
Z97 Gaming 5 motherboard
WD blue 1TB HD
600W PS

 
Solution
X drive is actually a ram drive created by the USB to run the processes in, all the drive letters are mixed up when you boot off USB so if you look at picture 4 it shows you should have run it on D drive.

So you tried this? https://www.lifewire.com/how-to-rebuild-the-bcd-in-windows-2624508

is there anything on C drive you want to rescue? try making this on another PC: http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/windows-vista/use-ubuntu-live-cd-to-backup-files-from-your-dead-windows-computer/

you can also access windows files doing this:
I inserted my windows installation disk and opened the command prompt. I typed notepad in which obviously opened the notepad. From there I went to file > open which opened a file explorer. I plugged an external...
X drive is actually a ram drive created by the USB to run the processes in, all the drive letters are mixed up when you boot off USB so if you look at picture 4 it shows you should have run it on D drive.

So you tried this? https://www.lifewire.com/how-to-rebuild-the-bcd-in-windows-2624508

is there anything on C drive you want to rescue? try making this on another PC: http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/windows-vista/use-ubuntu-live-cd-to-backup-files-from-your-dead-windows-computer/

you can also access windows files doing this:
I inserted my windows installation disk and opened the command prompt. I typed notepad in which obviously opened the notepad. From there I went to file > open which opened a file explorer. I plugged an external hard drive into my USB port, and I searched for all of my most irreplaceable files and copied them onto the external drive, then once I finished, I plugged my drive into my Mac and confirmed that all the files are all there.

Did you try reset this PC? it might at least let you save login and Library folder contents (libraries being documents, music, pictures, movies). It is in the troubleshoot menu (see picture 2)

if you can't reset, and you manage to copy everything off PC, try doing a clean install using that installer.

boot from installer
follow this guide: http://www.tenforums.com/tutorials/1950-windows-10-clean-install.html

when you reach the screen asking for licence, click "I don't have a key" and win 10 will continue to install and reactivate once finished

On the screen where you choose where to install win 10, if it gives you an error about GPT drives, delete all the partitions on the hdd and press next. If it still gives error, cancel out of the installer and restart PC and start installer again, it will accept next on that screen this time (some PC just need a restart here).
 
Solution