Boot problem on Msi x570 edge wifi motherboard
-
Good afternoon, I have been using my new PC for 15 days, with an Msi x570 edge wifi motherboard, and for 2 days now, it has been taking 3 or 4 restarts to boot up Windows 10 and it keeps saying diagnosing errors and repairing........I can't find the problem.
It restarts automatically. I need help, thank you -
Hello,
I would try installing Windows on another disk, although I suspect it is not a problem with the disk itself, but rather with the Windows installation and some software issue.
Best regards
-
To diagnose the PC, it is best to start by eliminating components. Turn on the computer with as few components as possible, just one RAM module, with the integrated graphics if it has one, etc... You can also run a hard drive test and a RAM test like memtest.
-
Edit: If the computer is new, pre-assembled and under warranty, do not continue reading and use it.
First of all, what changed for it to start going wrong overnight?
Indeed, a breakdown can cause all of that, but a change in the software environment (Windows update or a driver, installation of programs that interfere with startup or that modify values in the UEFI...) can also cause it.
To begin with, apart from the motherboard, it would be good to know the make and model of the rest of the components, including the power supply.
Then, as Yorus comments, run a disk diagnostic with CrystalDisk Info for example, to rule out a failure of this.
If it marks a good health status, you can do two things: either format and reinstall the OS, or continue checking components to rule out hardware failure.
If you opt for the second, the next thing would be to test the RAM with MemTest86+.
My suggestion is that, if it doesn't start throwing errors, let it complete about nine passes; only if there are errors (one is enough) repeat the test with each module separately.If everything goes well, do a clear CMOS on the motherboard and let it load the default values (each board has its system to do this, but in general it's enough to unplug the computer, remove the battery, press power and reset, put the battery back and plug the computer back in. This would rule out that it failed due to an unstable XMP profile.
Sorry for the long text and you will tell us.
-
I think it's a matter of the operating system, given what you said about the reboots being "to start up", that is, at the beginning.
I understand that once it starts up and enters Windows, the system is stable. You'll keep us posted.Best regards