I believe my HDD is preventing my PC from booting properly.
To give context, I was just using my computer until file explorer was being unresponsive. I tried to close it and it asked me to either End Process or to cancel and wait. I clicked cancel, but it ruined all of windows explorer anyway. After I tried to restart, it looks like my PC wasn't even able to detect Windows 10 at all anymore on my SSD (I had my SSD as the one with Windows on it). I tried to do a bunch of things to repair it by going into the WRE through the Windows installation Media on my USB. No dice. In the end, I decided to delete everything on my SSD to reinstall Windows (they didn't let me keep my files, but I only had games on there I can reinstall anyway).
I found out that leaving my SATA cables plugged into my HDD made everything load extremely slow. I saw that both my SSD and HDD now had "Windows Boot Manager" before the name now. I read that it didn't matter as long as I put the SSD as boot priority, so I did. I disabled the HDD as a boot option. However, my PC won't load at all and get stuck in the spinning circle thing if I leave my HDD in.
I tried to take out the HDD to see if everything would load, and it did. But if I tried to plug it back in after getting onto the Windows desktop, my PC goes to a blue screen of death and tells me I need to repair my PC. Sometimes plugging in my HDD with my SSD still in can either make both go undetected or have only the HDD be detected in my BIOS. Any option that I pick turns off my computer and restarts it to the same screen. I should mention that my pc won't detect my 2nd monitor now either, but I think I just need to reinstall the graphics driver for that.
I have no idea what the health of my HDD is now. I tried to leave it in so that I could check and repair it through a command shell, but I can't even get there since it won't load. How do I repair or check the health of my HDD if my computer can't even get to the screen to fix it? What can I do?
I have a Samsung SSD, Seagate barracuda 2TB HDD, and a PRIME B560-PLUS motherboard.
To give context, I was just using my computer until file explorer was being unresponsive. I tried to close it and it asked me to either End Process or to cancel and wait. I clicked cancel, but it ruined all of windows explorer anyway. After I tried to restart, it looks like my PC wasn't even able to detect Windows 10 at all anymore on my SSD (I had my SSD as the one with Windows on it). I tried to do a bunch of things to repair it by going into the WRE through the Windows installation Media on my USB. No dice. In the end, I decided to delete everything on my SSD to reinstall Windows (they didn't let me keep my files, but I only had games on there I can reinstall anyway).
I found out that leaving my SATA cables plugged into my HDD made everything load extremely slow. I saw that both my SSD and HDD now had "Windows Boot Manager" before the name now. I read that it didn't matter as long as I put the SSD as boot priority, so I did. I disabled the HDD as a boot option. However, my PC won't load at all and get stuck in the spinning circle thing if I leave my HDD in.
I tried to take out the HDD to see if everything would load, and it did. But if I tried to plug it back in after getting onto the Windows desktop, my PC goes to a blue screen of death and tells me I need to repair my PC. Sometimes plugging in my HDD with my SSD still in can either make both go undetected or have only the HDD be detected in my BIOS. Any option that I pick turns off my computer and restarts it to the same screen. I should mention that my pc won't detect my 2nd monitor now either, but I think I just need to reinstall the graphics driver for that.
I have no idea what the health of my HDD is now. I tried to leave it in so that I could check and repair it through a command shell, but I can't even get there since it won't load. How do I repair or check the health of my HDD if my computer can't even get to the screen to fix it? What can I do?
I have a Samsung SSD, Seagate barracuda 2TB HDD, and a PRIME B560-PLUS motherboard.
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