PC stuck in boot loop and nothings I've tried has fixed it!

sc4tman1ng

Prominent
Feb 9, 2018
2
0
510
Long story short: a few days ago I was watching a steam on Twitch and my video quality went to crap then my monitors went to sleep while my PC was running, I tried to restart my PC and found it was getting stuck at the windows logo during the boot up, turning off then booting up again, so on and on. I've tried the" bootrec" and "chkdsk" ECT. Commands to no success.

Startup repair reads:

Problem Event Name: Setup Repair Offline
Problem Signature 01: 6.1.7600.16385
Problem Signature 02: 6.1.7600.16385
Problem Signature 03: unknown
Problem Signature 04: 21198052
Problem Signature 05: SystemDisk
Problem Signature 06: 2
Problem Signature 07: BadDriver

My PC Specs:
CPU: Intel Core i7 5820K
MotherBoard: MSI X99A Gaming 7
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws V Series 16GB (8GBx2) DDR4
Storage: 1x Seagate Barracuda 2TB 1x Samsung 850 Evo 500gb
Power Supply: EVGA SuperNOVA G2 Gold 750W Power Supply
 
Solution


I had the exact same thing happen recently. Do you have an image backup of...
Is it possible to boot into safe mode? Have you tried startup repair? Have you tried reseating the gpu and RAM sticks?
 


It is possible to boot into safe mode, I have tried startup repair many times, and have tried reseating both gpu and ram. No luck.
 


I had the exact same thing happen recently. Do you have an image backup of your computer from a fairly recent date? I'd wager you could hook up the drive to get the files, but the bad driver mentioned is a bad omen for getting it to boot into normal Windows. If you don't have a backup, I would for sure hook the drive up to another system and at least get the files onto a flash drive. I think you will need to be able to restore from an image backup.

However, if you can get into safe mode, leave the PC on and leave it there in safe mode, while you sort through the issues. You may not get a second chance if Safe Mode fails. While you are in Safe Mode, you might look into creating an image backup for one thing. Then too, solving this could be as simple as using System Restore again if you can get into Safe Mode with Networking. The mention of the driver mentioned in the error, combined with the ability to boot into Safe Mode, means it's a non-Windows driver or something for which Windows doesn't have a stock driver. Could be a software driver, too, btw. You can from Safe Mode also potentially disable drivers from running on boot using Autoruns, but that could get pretty complicated.

Simplest solution would be to get files and restore image backup...

 
Solution