Question I can't install Windows 11 ?

itsMHmoon

Commendable
Apr 29, 2021
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1,510
On first boot up after Windows install I'm stuck at a blue screen error. My PC keeps rebooting to this:







Already tried these methods:
1. Upgrading from Win 10
2. Fresh installing from USB using Rufus and Media creation tool
3. Installing Win11 with only essential components (CPU, GPU, 8GB RAM, NVME SSD)
4. Bootable win11 from an USB drive

Also, did these:
1. BIOS reset
2. BIOS update
3. Reinstalling RAM and NVME SSD
4. Installing on a different SATA SSD

Current BIOS settings:






Spec:

However, there wasn't any issue with the Windows 10 installation. Two days ago, I faced this this on Windows 10, which led me to install a fresh copy of Windows. Then I wanted to upgrade to Windows 11.

Any solution for this?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
What BIOS version are you currently on for your motherboard? Where did you source the installer for your OS? Speaking of the OS, did you make sure to install the OS in offline mode? Please include the make and model of your storage/SSD.
 
After installing, on first boot up I'm stuck at a blue screen error. My PC keeps rebooting to this:









Already tried these methods:
1. Upgrading from Win 10
2. Fresh installing from USB using Rufus and Media creation tool
3. Installing Win11 with only essential components (CPU, GPU, 8GB RAM, NVME SSD)
4. Bootable win11 from an USB drive


Also, did these:
1. BIOS reset
2. BIOS update
3. Reinstalling RAM and NVME SSD
4. Installing on a different SATA SSD

Spec:


Any solution for this?
Was your computer connected by ethernet to the internet at the time of installation so that the installer could download any files necessary to complete the installation process? Did you try loading the installer on any different usb drives (e.g. usb 2.0)? Were Secure Boot and TPM turned on in bios?
 
Was your computer connected by ethernet to the internet at the time of installation so that the installer could download any files necessary to complete the installation process? Did you try loading the installer on any different usb drives (e.g. usb 2.0)? Were Secure Boot and TPM turned on in bios?
  1. Yes, it was connected
  2. It doesn't sopport USB 2.0
  3. Yes
 
Hi i am just wondering if the following is the cause of your problem........

I am in England and in various pc magazines their have been reports that in updates microsoft has mistakenly identified a lot of pc's as being capable of running windows 11 when in actual fact they are NOT able to run it.
You get the download and then thats when the problems start
 
was this a clean install?

Did you set up user accounts?

If you had all those errors while installing, then running memtest is best idea.

Try running memtest86 on each of your ram sticks, one stick at a time, up to 4 passes. Only error count you want is 0, any higher could be cause of the BSOD. Remove/replace ram sticks with errors. Memtest is created as a bootable USB so that you don’t need windows to run it

I am in England and in various pc magazines their have been reports that in updates microsoft has mistakenly identified a lot of pc's as being capable of running windows 11 when in actual fact they are NOT able to run it.
You get the download and then thats when the problems start
they would probably get errors about TPM, not necessarily BSOD. It was also a clean install. Not an update.

Two days ago, I faced this this on Windows 10, which led me to install a fresh copy of Windows. Then I wanted to upgrade to Windows 11.
did you check your boot drives health when you got this error? Its possible the fact windows is corrupted on a clean install that the drive is to blame.
 
  1. Yes, it was connected
  2. It doesn't sopport USB 2.0
  3. Yes
Of course it supports usb 2. First, there are 2 usb 2 sockets above the keyboard/mouse port. And second, every usb 3 socket is backwards compatible with a usb 2 stick. If all of the internal components in your box are functioning properly then the remaining factor would be a defect in the usb stick that you're using. So you should try another and using a usb 2 stick might help.
 
Run memtest86.

Disable any and all overclocking.
Disable A-XMP/DOCP.
as mentioned above, remove any overclocking, that means reduce ram clock to ddr4-2666
If you had all those errors while installing, then running memtest is best idea.

Try running memtest86 on each of your ram sticks, one stick at a time, up to 4 passes.
There was no error on memtest86.
I think my motherboard has some problems.

Thank you guys, for your suggestions. I guess I have to stick with Windows 10 for now!