PC is broken. Cannot boot to hard drive. Startup sequence also altered.


Recommended Posts

I'm not having a good day if you've been keeping up with my previous threads :( 

 

Basically i restarted my PC & i got some error message on startup which i forget what it said. I had the option to press a key to continue which i did.

I noticed when i accessed my hard drive a lot of websites that had auto logins had been erased - i had to manually enter the details. I chose to restart the PC again (mistake!)

as the PC went to restart it was stuck at "loading asus express gate". The thing here is, when the PC was working it never even went to this screen, never mind actually getting stuck at it.

 

So i turned the PC off & then back on. Before all this went wrong the first thing you would see on startup is a load of writing on the screen, loading various USB whatever-they-are's, it'd mention something about 6 cores unlocked (can you tell i'm not really fluent in jargon?)

but this time it never made it to that screen. It was a green ASUS screen instead that stated the motherboard type & some various F-key options, delete, tab.

 

Within this PC there are 3 hard drives. 2 of which have Windows 7 installed & the 3rd is basically just a dumping ground for files. I was able to boot to the 'other' hard drive which had Windows 7 on it - that's how i'm able to post this now. I'm currently in the process of accessing the faulty hard drive (or rather, the one that it wont boot to) via this hard drive & transferring the files on to an external hard drive for backup (i know, i should have a better backup system in place).

 

I'm wondering what has likely happened. I haven't deleted anything.

 

Also, what is this green ASUS screen at the start & how do i revert it back to it was?

 

Is there any way i can fix this booting issue or is a clean install the only way?

If you never saw the Express Gate before, and never saw the ASUS title screen before - it sounds like your BIOS was corrupted and it went back to default settings.  (in default - both the title screen and Express Gate are enabled)

If you are able to transfer your important files to another drive - I would focus on that 1st - for sure.

Then, once you are sure you have all of your important stuff moved over to another drive - then you can try rebooting - and going into BIOS setup and fixing the settings.

It could be simply that the CMOS battery went dead, and when you powered everything off - you lost your settings... not sure at this point - that is a guess.

But - keep doing what you are doing and moving the data to somewhere safe.

Then, and only then, reboot and change your BIOS settings.

Thanks.

 

Typically it would happen late at night. 10:40pm. I'm up for work at 5:50am :( & i've a lot to transfer.

 

Have you any idea how i remove the title screen? And also possibly the express gate as i don't ever remember it being there, although i don't know why i would've removed that in the first place but the title screen definitely wasn't there.

 

Motherboard is: M4A88TD-V EVO/USB3

This may be symptom of a bad SATA cable. Change it with the DVD drive and/or other hard drive cable and boot it to test. Rule this out first before attempting any other repairs.

 

If that tests OK, what happens if you try to boot to the primary Win7 drive? If it hangs or displays a message when doing so, the BCD may be corrupt.

  On 04/12/2016 at 22:43, Technique said:

Thanks.

 

Typically it would happen late at night. 10:40pm. I'm up for work at 5:50am :( & i've a lot to transfer.

 

Have you any idea how i remove the title screen? And also possibly the express gate as i don't ever remember it being there, although i don't know why i would've removed that in the first place but the title screen definitely wasn't there.

 

Motherboard is: M4A88TD-V EVO/USB3

Expand  

See if this helps.
 

 

  On 04/12/2016 at 23:18, Max said:

This may be symptom of a bad SATA cable. Change it with the DVD drive and/or other hard drive cable and boot it to test. Rule this out first before attempting any other repairs.

 

If that tests OK, what happens if you try to boot to the primary Win7 drive? If it hangs or displays a message when doing so, the BCD may be corrupt.

Expand  

A bad SATA cable wont revert his BIOS settings to default though. (ie enabling Express Gate & title screen)

The bios will revert to default settings if it detects an issue with booting, the thing is, the Asus boot up screen would be a default parameter, so at some point, somebody has changed various bios settings and from your posts, I very much doubt it was you.

9 times out of 10 this would be caused by either the CPU or memory settings being wrong, which in turn can corrupt data being written to the hard drive.

I'm only speculating here but It could be that the CPU or  memory was either overclocked or ran at the wrong voltage, and is no longer able to sustain the frequency at the current voltage. This often happens over time when overclocking.

 

The best thing to do is leave things as they are and see how you go, see if you can repair the windows installation, set it to boot from the drive and keep hitting F8. Not being able to boot to a drive doesn't mean it's faulty, it could just be that Windows files are corrupt.

Edited by SIE

The only way I could see it being over locking is if I somehow got hacked online & they did it via that. Nobody else has physical access to the PC other than my wife & she wouldn't do that. 

 

I have the Windows 7 DVD. How do I go about attempting to repair this drive? 

 

This all sounds strange, I'm glad you are still able to access the drive that will no longer boot the other Windows 7, but my suggestion is that when you have completed transferring files from that drive to another location, to do a chkdsk, you can do this on the faulty drive from within Windows (the one you are booted into) select that drive, right click and select properties, then the tools tab and then 'check' then we can rule out if the drive has problems or not.

 

SNAG-0001.png

 

If your bios settings got reset, you might have to find a screen in your bios where you can select the boot order of disks. It probably chose the first bootable disk as default, which sounds like not your normal Windows installation, simply changing the boot order of the disks might help too.

  • Like 1

Did you try looking to see the boot order of disks in your BIOS? It's good that check disk didn't find any errors though, means the hard drive is ok :)

  • Like 1

Hello,

 

ASUS Express Gate is a tiny distribution of Linux with a web browser, media player and a few other apps that runs off a USB flash drive embedded on the motherboard.  It was designed to give you a way to quickly get to simple Internet applications without having to wait for an operating system like Microsoft Windows XP or Microsoft Windows Vista to load from the hard disk drive.  ASUS still has a marketing web site on it at http://event.asus.com/mb/expressgate/ [Adobe Flash Player required.].  The last time I used it was on an Asus P6T-Deluxe [X58 chipset] around 2007 or 2008.  I don't recall it being particularly useful, and only used it a handful of times.

 

From looking at the specs for the ASUS M4A88TD-V EVO/USB3 motherboard, it appears that ASUS was still using it at least as recently in 2010 when that motherboard was designed.

 

Given that you have a motherboard that's about seven years old, the most likely reason you received this error and the computer was unable to access its disk drive(s) is that the little CR-2032 coin cell battery which provides a trickle of current to power the CMOS/RTC memory has finally died.  Replacing it by following the instructions in the motherboard's manual, then go into the BIOS and set the clock to the current time, plus whatever options you normally set in there, and you should be back up and running.  The batteries are about $3 and available wherever batteries are normally sold (grocer, supermarket, drug store, electronics store, etc.)

 

Regards,

 

Aryeh Goretsky

 

I'm curious about the battery theory.

 

If that is so, then why can i simply just disconnect the problem hard drive & my PC then works as normal with the other drive that has Windows 7 on it?

 

It'll be pretty obvious that i'm no computer guru but it makes sense to me that if the battery was duff, then it'd be duff for everything, not just 1 hard drive & not the rest?

 

 

As for the boot order, everything was as it should be tbh.

Sounds like a dead CMOS battery and a bad partition table on the HDD.

 

https://neosmart.net/wiki/fix-mbr/#Fix_the_MBR_in_Windows_7

 

Follow those steps for it, otherwise just grab your data and reload.  No point and spending anymore time than that on it (unless you have very specialized requirements).

  On 06/12/2016 at 20:52, CougarDan said:

 

 

https://neosmart.net/wiki/fix-mbr/#Fix_the_MBR_in_Windows_7

 

Follow those steps for it, otherwise just grab your data and reload.  No point and spending anymore time than that on it (unless you have very specialized requirements).

Expand  

For that, should i disconnect all other hard drives (leaving only the duff one connected) or should i just leave all hard drives connected?

Hello,

 

The CMOS memory contains a table of information about the computer's hardware.  In this case, it sounds like the entry in memory for one particular hard disk drive is corrupt.

 

Keep in mind you have have CMOS errors due to a low battery without seeing error message about setting the clock, or being prompted to enter the BIOS settings to check/confirm their values.  I've seen problems occur when a +3.0VDC battery drops just a little to +2.95VDC.

 

Regards,

 

Aryeh Goretsky

 

  • Like 2

Best practice would be to disconnect the other hard drives, not a necessity though.

 

As for the battery, it has nothing to do with it being associated with a particular drive.  It seems that the original issue was due to the battery reverting some BIOS settings, which is why you ended up with the Asus Express Gate and the Splash screen.   During the course of the reboot(s)/freeze(s) your partition was corrupted so even though all the files are accessible, Windows does not see it as a valid boot drive.  If you fix the MBR that should again allow you to boot that drive.

 

Up to you to decide time vs effort.  ;)

The fix mbr thing didn't seem to work. I've attached photos of what was said in case I did it wrong. 

 

Some things popped up that that that link didn't mention, such as the Y N question. 

 

 

IMG_7569.JPG

I'd upload the other but it seems I'm at my limit. 

 

I followed the second half of that link but it said the system partition was not found. 

In the first screenshot it says a Windows installation was found and asked if you wanted to add it to the boot list, you did n (No) Why? Seems this would have fixed the issue.

 

Then in your second screenshot, it looks like you tried to run that command on D:\ (which looks like a CD/DVD or a fix Windows state) that's why the partition wasn't found.

 

Is the Windows installation on C:\ the one that doesn't boot? Because from the first screenshot, it seemed like the first command you typed might have fixed things for you.

  • Like 1

I saw the word installation & didn't know if all my files would get installed over & deleted. I thought best to choose no. 

 

Plus on that link it never said anything about that question but I can try again tonight by selecting yes this time. 

 

Also the second shot has D listed because as I understood it the latter part of the link given said you should basically list the drive that the DVD is in, so that's why I selected D in the second screenshot. 

 

Yes windows will be on C drive. 

Yeah to be clear, the first question of the first screenshot only asks if the installation (your missing Windows start up) can be added to the bootlist. You should select yes. I reckon yo'll be able to select it upon boot after that!

 

SNAG-0002.png

 

It should then appear in msconfig (to view it, right click Start > Run > type msconfig and enter). I assume the second Windows installation isn't listed there at all because the bootlist is corrupted, but when it is.. you can select  the now fixed one as default.. good luck!

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • spwave 0.9.0-1 by Razvan Serea spwave is a cross-platform audio editor designed for research and advanced analysis. It supports a wide range of audio formats, including WAV, AIFF, MP3, Ogg Vorbis, FLAC, ALAC, raw PCM, and more via plug-ins. spwave offers precise editing tools such as zoom, crop, fade in/out, gain adjustment, and region extraction. It enables detailed spectral and phase analysis and supports unlimited undo/redo. Users can drag and drop files, edit metadata, save labeled regions, and view multiple synchronized waveforms. Internally, spwave processes audio in 64-bit precision, ensuring high accuracy. It runs on Windows, macOS, and Linux, making it a reliable and flexible tool for audio research and editing. spwave has following features: Support for multiple platforms: Windows, macOS, Linux (Motif, gtk), etc. Support for WAV, AIFF, MP3, Ogg Vorbis, FLAC, ALAC, raw, and text files by using plug-ins. Support for many bits/samples: 8bits, 16bits, 24bits, 32bits, 32bits float, 64bits double. Converting the sampling frequency and the bits/sample of a file. Playing, zooming, cropping, deleting, extracting, etc. of a selected region. Fade-in, fade-out, gain adjustment, channel swapping, etc of a selected region. Editing file information that supports comments of WAV and AIFF, and ID3 tag of MP3. Analysis of a selected region using several analysis types, e.g. spectrum, smoothed spectrum, phase, unwrapped phase and group delay. Undoing and redoing without limitation of the number of times. Waveform extraction by drag & drop. Opening files by drag & drop. Autosaving of selected regions (you can do this by drag & drop also). Saving positions and regions as labels. Viewing some waveforms and setting regions synchronously. Almost all processing is 64 bits processing internally. Supported Formats: Read/Write: WAV, AIFF, AIFC, CAF, MP3, Ogg Vorbis, FLAC, ALAC (.caf, .mp4), WMA (Windows), APE, AU/SND, PARIS, NIST, IRCAM, raw PCM, text. Read-only: MPEG-2 Layer 3 MP3, RMP files with VBR support. With 64-bit internal processing, autosave capabilities, and synchronized multi-view waveform editing, spwave is a solid tool for anyone handling complex audio editing or acoustic research. spwave 0.9.0-1 changelog: Implemented CQT spectrum and CQT spectrogram (beta version). Implemented piano-key display for spectrum/spectrogram view. Implemented indication of musical note name in cursor information for spectrum/spectrogram view. Fixed a bug that spectrogram view after zoom-in with large factor sometimes freezes. Fixed a bug that scroll and zoom-out in spectrogram view after zoom-in with large factor do not work correctly. Fixed a bug that spectrogram view provides sometimes wrong time information. Fixed a bug that plugin errors sometimes cause a crash. Fixed a bug that the color of grid lines is wrong in printing. Optimized layout of spectrogram view for printing. Enhanced the function of waveform cropping from label information. Fixed a bug that some items in the preference dialog related to labels do not work. Added some items related to the region label in the preference dialog. Fixed a bug that drawing selected region in the log-frequency axis does not work correctly. Added partial support for the dark mode of Windows (the menu bar and the menus). Fixed a bug that the cursor to indicate current calculation position of spectrogram is sometimes not shown. Changed drawing of cursor information into that with white background so as to make the information legible. Fixed a bug that moving to the head by scrolling the overview display sometimes fails. Added feature of alignment of the view region between spectrum view and spectrogram view. Download: spwave 64-bit | spwave 32-bit | ~3.0 MB (Freeware) Download: spwave ARM64 | 2.9 MB Links: spwave Home page | Other OSes | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Microsoft Weekly: redesigned Windows 11 Start menu, Xbox handheld is here, and more by Taras Buria This week's news recap is here. Fresh Windows 11 preview builds with the redesigned Start menu and Windows Vista flashbacks, the long-anticipated Xbox handheld, Patch Tuesday updates, gaming news, and more. Quick links: Windows 10 and 11 Windows Insider Program Updates are available Gaming news Great deals to check Windows 11 and Windows 10 Here, we talk about everything happening around Microsoft's latest operating system in the Stable channel and preview builds: new features, removed features, controversies, bugs, interesting findings, and more. And, of course, you may find a word or two about older versions. June 2025 Patch Tuesday updates are out. Windows 10 received KB5060533 with build numbers 19044.5965 and 19045.5965. Supported Windows 11 versions received KB5060842 and KB5060999 with build numbers 26100.4349, 22631.5472, and 22621.5472. Later, Microsoft released an out-of-band update to address problems with games with Easy Anti-Cheat, causing system restarts upon launch, and a couple of recovery updates. Microsoft launched Copilot Vision with Highlights for Windows. This feature enables AI to see what is happening on the screen and offer additional information, analysis, and context. Copilot Vision currently works with up to two apps, but its availability is limited to the United States (more countries are on the way, says Microsoft). Now, here is some useful stuff for Windows users: a neat third-party maintenance tool that can run various checks, troubleshooters, and repair utilities; a useful guide about personalizing OneDrive folders with a touch of color, and more. Windows Insider Program Here is what Microsoft released for Windows Insiders this week: Builds Canary Channel Dev Channel Build 26200.5641 This build introduces the recently announced Start menu redesign. It also packs Lock Screen widget improvements, Narrator enhancements, updates to the gamepad keyboard, and a lot of various fixes. Build 26200.5651 Another Dev build introduced a Settings app agent, Recall improvements, seconds for the calendar clock, context menu enhancements, and more. Beta Channel Build 26120.4250 The Beta build has the same changelog as the one from the Dev Channel. Build 26120.4441 The same build as 26200.5651 from the Dev Channel. Release Preview Channel Build 22631.5545 With build 22631.5545 for Widnows 11, Microsoft improved default browser settings and the Windows Share UI and fixed several bugs. Build 19045.6029 This build introduces improvements to app defaults and multiple fixes for Windows 10. The redesigned Start menu is the most exciting part of the new builds, but as usual, it is rolling out gradually. You can mitigate that by force-enabling the new Start menu using the ViVeTool app as described in our guide. Interestingly, the latest builds introduced a funny bug where Windows 11 plays the Windows Vista startup sound on boot. Microsoft acknowledged the issue and said it is working on a fix in future updates. Meanwhile, if you use the latest Dev and Beta builds, you will get to enjoy 2006 nostalgia each time you turn on your PC. Updates are available This section covers software, firmware, and other notable updates (released and coming soon) delivering new features, security fixes, improvements, patches, and more from Microsoft and third parties. This week's browser updates include a fresh Dev Channel update for Microsoft Edge and secure password deployment in Edge for organizations. The latter arrived in the Stable Channel on June 13 with version 137.0.3296.83. There was also a minor update for Firefox. The latter received version 139.0.4, which addressed several issues with the browser freezing when switching apps, failing to save wallpapers with proper names, and more. In addition to the update, Mozilla announced that Deepfake Detector is shutting down. The service will go dark on June 26, 2025. Moving to Office updates, we have some changes to the new Outlook, which will block more files and allow you to perform more tasks when offline. OneDrive for Mac now supports external disks, Clipchamp lets you trim videos by cutting out parts of the transcript, and OneNote now supports Copilot Notebooks. Microsoft also announced an update on the removal of Exchange Online Basic Authentication in Office 365. Here are other updates and releases you may find interesting: Rufus received an update to version 4.8 with performance improvements for Windows images. Microsoft is committing to upskilling 1 million UK workers in AI this year. Here are the latest drivers and firmware updates released this week: Intel 32.0.101.6881 WHQL graphics driver with a single fix for Overwatch 2. AMD 25.6.2 non-WHQL with support for FBC: Firebreak, The Alters, and more. On the gaming side Learn about upcoming game releases, Xbox rumors, new hardware, software updates, freebies, deals, discounts, and more. A lot happened on the gaming side this week. At the Sunday Game Showcase, Microsoft and ASUS announced two Xbox handhelds: the ROG Xbox Ally and the ROG Xbox Ally X. These portable consoles are a big deal for the world of handheld devices, as they run a special version of Windows, which was optimized for portable gaming consoles with fewer processes running in the background. As such, they offer much better battery life and performance. You can read more about how Microsoft optimized Windows 11 for handhelds in a separate article. Next, we have plenty of new games and DLCs announced at the showcase; here is a recap: Indiana Jones and the Great Circle received a new DLC called The Order of Giants. It will be available on all supported platforms this September. Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 made a surprise appearance at the showcase. Activision released a teaser trailer where the game takes players to a futuristic experience set in 2035. Grounded 2 was announced. The sequel of the game for people with arachnophobia is coming next month, offering gamers a new miniaturized survival adventure. Obsidian Entertainment revealed the release date of The Outer Worlds 2 and details about companions. At Fate's End by Spiritfarer was announced, a new action game about fighting family. It is coming to consoles and PC somewhere in 2026. Skybound Games revealed Invincible VS, a brutal 3v3 tag fighting game by former Killer Instinct developers. Anno 117: Pax Romana received a November release date. Ubisoft also unveiled a special Governor's Edition. Nvidia announced new games for its cloud-streaming gaming service, GeForce NOW. If you own one of the following games, you can play them on Nvidia's cloud. The new additions include Frosthaven Demo, Dune: Awakening, MindsEye, The Alters, Kingdom Two Crowns, and more. Mojang finally has a release date for Vibrant Visuals and Chase the Skies updates. On June 17, Minecraft will get its long-anticipated visual overhaul, new features, fresh mobs, and more. Deals and freebies Steam is running a new Next Fest, during which gamers can try hundreds of games for free. The event ends on June 16, 2025. The Epic Games Store is giving away Two Point Hospital, a humorous hospital builder simulator. As usual, more deals are available in this week's Weekend PC Games Deals article. Other gaming news includes the following: GOG store introduced the One-Click Mods feature with support for Fallout: London and others. Valve announced new accessibility details for game listings on Steam. Steam finally has a native client for Apple Silicon. To finish this week's gaming section, here is an editorial from Paul Hill exploring the new $80 cost frontier in modern gaming. Great deals to check Every week, we cover many deals on different hardware and software. The following discounts are still available, so check them out. You might find something you want or need. JBL Bar 1000 and 700 sound bars Ring Floodlight Cameras Geekom Mini IT12 mini PC - $499 | $200 off Amazon Kindle Scribe (16GB) - $299.99 | 25% off LG gram Pro 16" Copilot+ PCs - $1,499.99 | 25% off GameSir Super Nova Wireless Controller for PC and mobile - $44.99 | 25% off Intel Core Ultra 7 Desktop Processor 265K 5.5 GHz - $259.99 | $144 off 12TB Seagate IronWolf Pro HDD - $218.49 | 13% off Polk Audio React 7" Wireless Subwoofer - $99.99 | 50% off StreamMaster Plus2 4K Gaming Projector - $1,699 | 15% off AMD Ryzen 5 9600X - $179.99 | 35% off Sony BRAVIA 5 65 Inch TV Mini LED - $1,298 | 13% off This link will take you to other issues of the Microsoft Weekly series. You can also support Neowin by registering a free member account or subscribing for extra member benefits, along with an ad-free tier option. Microsoft Weekly image background by
    • Yea but you cant forget about Windows 7 featuring most of this design too... it was also there in Win7!
    • I don't blame them, just have a load of people stand in front of the cars, they will not or should not move, that will stuff them.
    • Yeah, that would work. I have no problem with the way macOS looks like now, I don't see the point of them changing the look all the time, and that is the same with windows. I realise look have to change sometimes, but macOS is fine as it is, look wise.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Apprentice
      Wireless wookie went up a rank
      Apprentice
    • Week One Done
      bukro earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Year In
      Wulle earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Month Later
      Wulle earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      Simmo3D earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      593
    2. 2
      ATLien_0
      277
    3. 3
      +FloatingFatMan
      181
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      148
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      111
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!