Error 0x8007025D - a mess - bad RAM?

zaarin_2003

Distinguished
Mar 8, 2011
25
0
18,530
Hi,

Windows 10 Home 64 bit

Forgive the long story, but I feel as much detail as possible is a good thing and I'd be really grateful for some help please!

A couple of months ago I decided to enable XMP mode on my Asus Z87-K motherboard because userbench website reported that my RAM was Corsair Vengence clocked at 1800mhz and was running slowly. I checked the BIOS and sure enough, XMP was disabled and the RAM was running at 1333Mhz. Upon restarting, I recall quickly receiving a BSOD. I put it down to what I'd just done and turned XMP off again. I wasworried I'd overclocked and damage my RAM or something.

Since then, I started to notice the occasional BSOD - usually MEMORY MANAGEMENT, but not always. Kernal security one time, something about a corrupt page file. They were rare. One every few days, but more than I was comfortable with.

Fast forward to last week and the BSOD had gotten a little worse. Strangely, they never happened whilst doing something strenuous, like playing a graphically intensive game, but whilst browsing on Edge.

Now yesterday: having become bored of the occasional BSOD, I tried running sfc /scannow but it said resource protection couldn't complete the scan. I received a similar error running the DSIM fix to verify Windows 10.

I then noticed whilst working that MS Office then had weird problem - updates failed with a 'something went wrong' error. I tried uninstalling MS Office and received a similar error. A MS tech had no ideas. "Something is seriously wrong with your OS" he said. He suggested a repair in place upgrade using the media creation tool.

I did that and found that sfc /scannow worked, but the same problem with Office persisted and the BSOD happened almost immediately.

I performed a reset of Windows 10, the next most intrusive option. I kept my files, but chose to lose the apps etc. So it was more or less a clean install.

BSOD fairly quickly.

So, I thought, f -it. I downloaded Windows 10 onto a USB, restarted, deleted my HD partitions and decided upon a clean install.

That's where I am now. It gets part way and then pops up with the error 0x8007025D - important files could not be installed.

I have tried removing all hardware except for the monitor, keyboard and mouse (corded) and the USB stick with the install on it. Nothing helps. I now have no OS but the install fails with this message.

UPDATE - I also tried to install from a DVD so don't have the USB stick attached either. Nope!

Please help.

Does anyone have any ideas? Could it be the RAM? I don't want to go too far putting thoughts in anyone's head though. Could it be something else? I did overclock my GTX 1060, but it was only a modest overclock of 100Mhz on the GPU and 200Mhz on the Ram. temperatures didn't exceed 70 degrees C under stress and I lowered it again when the BSODs started, which didn't help.

Another questions... if new RAM doesn't help - what can I try??

Thank you

Matt
 

indsup

Reputable
Apr 26, 2015
432
1
4,960
That usually comes up if your running antivirus while doing the update. The antivirus will block installation of files causing this issue. Turn off your antivirus temporarily while doing the update and see if that allows it to complete with no errors. If that doesn't work run scan disk and make sure you don't have any bad sectors. Not likely a memory problem it should be a different error for that. The incomplete update can and will cause the blue screen.
 

zaarin_2003

Distinguished
Mar 8, 2011
25
0
18,530


Hi,

Thanks, but I'm installing from a DVD onto a black hard drive. I have no operating system at all at the moment!