Computer wont start, auto repair loop

Aug 18, 2018
2
0
10
Getting really frustrated as my computer very randomly wont start. One day it was completely fine and now I cant even get into the desktop. It fails to boot or something and then runs auto repair which fails every time. Ive tried all the fixes I can possibly find and nothing. Resetting it fails, restoring it fails, Ive tried the command prompt things like boot repair but it says I dont have permission and ging through this line: cd c:\windows\system32\config but it says the file location doesnt exist or somethingalon those lines. the code it gives me is bad system config info. Any suggestions please please help me out I have no idea what to do!
 
Solution
Seems like your OS might've gone corrupt. Are you working with Windows 10? If so, try and remove the CMOS battery and replace it after 15 minutes. See if the primary boot device in BIOS is Windows Boot Manager. Again, I'm assuming you're on Windows 10 and I'm yet wondering what your specs are for your system. It could be that you need a BIOS update as well.

Can you list your specs like so:
CPU:
Motherboard:
Ram:
SSD/HDD:
GPU:
PSU:
Chassis:

If you are indeed on Windows 10, you will need to practice a habit of backing up your data regularly since the auto update function often does this to a number of machines. Worst case scenario, you're going to have to recreate the bootable installer for the OS using Windows Media Creation Tool and...
Seems like your OS might've gone corrupt. Are you working with Windows 10? If so, try and remove the CMOS battery and replace it after 15 minutes. See if the primary boot device in BIOS is Windows Boot Manager. Again, I'm assuming you're on Windows 10 and I'm yet wondering what your specs are for your system. It could be that you need a BIOS update as well.

Can you list your specs like so:
CPU:
Motherboard:
Ram:
SSD/HDD:
GPU:
PSU:
Chassis:

If you are indeed on Windows 10, you will need to practice a habit of backing up your data regularly since the auto update function often does this to a number of machines. Worst case scenario, you're going to have to recreate the bootable installer for the OS using Windows Media Creation Tool and reinstall the OS. If restore points and SFC/scannow fails, the only option left is a reinstall.
 
Solution