Hi All,
I seem to be perplexed by the predicament my hardware has gotten into because I barely made any modifications. In any case the following message appears whenever I try to boot up my machine:
Now, I’m trying to migrate my 120 GB Kingston SSD image to my 500 GB Samsung SSD including operating system and all. The Kingston SSD is the one that is running my operating system. I created a backup of my 120 GB Kingston SSD with AOMEI backupper and then did a disk restore to the 500 GB Samsung SSD. In any case, I switched the SATA cables to my Samsung SSD and the machine couldn’t boot with that SSD and so I decided to go back to my Kingston SSD and figure out where I went wrong. The Kingston SSD has been solid up to the point I decided to mess around with the SATA cables and I hadn’t modified any of its files (just backed them up). Now the Kingston SSD won’t boot and the above message appears. What gives?
Could I use a windows 7 startup repair utility to repair my windows 10 boot manager?
A little history:
I recall that when I was building my PC way back when, I started to fear switching the SATA cables on my hard drives because this used to happen whenever I fiddled around back there. When I finally got a working setup I stopped because I was afraid I would again run into this unbootable state. Does anyone experience this type of sensitive nature to SATA interfaces? Am I missing a configuration? Or is this normal and I can’t swap around cables willy-nilly? They say SATA in AHCI mode is hot-swappable but this has gotten to me to a point where I’m afraid to fiddle with the hardware in my computer. This doesn’t seem to be normal.
I seem to be perplexed by the predicament my hardware has gotten into because I barely made any modifications. In any case the following message appears whenever I try to boot up my machine:
“Windows boot Manager:
Windows failed to start. A recent hardware or software change might be the cause. To fix the problem:
Insert your windows installation disc and restart your computer.
Choose your language settings, and then click “Next.”
Click “Repair your computer.”
If you do not have this disc, contact your system administrator or computer manufacture for assistance.
Status: 0xc000000f
Info: The boot selection failed because a required device is inaccessible.”
Now, I’m trying to migrate my 120 GB Kingston SSD image to my 500 GB Samsung SSD including operating system and all. The Kingston SSD is the one that is running my operating system. I created a backup of my 120 GB Kingston SSD with AOMEI backupper and then did a disk restore to the 500 GB Samsung SSD. In any case, I switched the SATA cables to my Samsung SSD and the machine couldn’t boot with that SSD and so I decided to go back to my Kingston SSD and figure out where I went wrong. The Kingston SSD has been solid up to the point I decided to mess around with the SATA cables and I hadn’t modified any of its files (just backed them up). Now the Kingston SSD won’t boot and the above message appears. What gives?
Could I use a windows 7 startup repair utility to repair my windows 10 boot manager?
Specs:
Motherboard: ASUS P8-Z68-M
Harddrives: C:\ - Kingston (main OS), G:\ - Samsung (new SSD), F:\ - Western Digital Data Drive, 500 GB
OS: Windows 10 (upgraded from Windows 7) – has both GPT and MBR boot partitions
RAM: 16 GB
Processor: Intel i7 2600k, 3.40 GHz, LGA1155, 95W
A little history:
I recall that when I was building my PC way back when, I started to fear switching the SATA cables on my hard drives because this used to happen whenever I fiddled around back there. When I finally got a working setup I stopped because I was afraid I would again run into this unbootable state. Does anyone experience this type of sensitive nature to SATA interfaces? Am I missing a configuration? Or is this normal and I can’t swap around cables willy-nilly? They say SATA in AHCI mode is hot-swappable but this has gotten to me to a point where I’m afraid to fiddle with the hardware in my computer. This doesn’t seem to be normal.