You are viewing our Forum Archives. To view or take place in current topics click here.
Unable to boot into Windows 8.1
Posted:

Unable to boot into Windows 8.1Posted:

Waltee
  • Powerhouse
Status: Offline
Joined: Oct 25, 201014Year Member
Posts: 450
Reputation Power: 15
Status: Offline
Joined: Oct 25, 201014Year Member
Posts: 450
Reputation Power: 15
To cut a long story short, I decided to try (and succeeded) to make my system a Hackintosh and run OS X Yosemite. Somewhere along the line, something has happened to my Windows 8.1 bootloader and I can't boot into it.

I can boot into OS X just fine, I can boot into my Windows 10 Tech Preview perfectly fine as well (it's what I'm currently using to type this), but whenever I try and boot into my Windows 8.1 Pro it immediately blue screens with a Boot/BCD/0xc0000000f (number of 0's may be off).

Now it's not the first time I've dabbled with multiple booting systems, I've always had access to multiple OS on this system whether it be Windows, Linux, a mix match of the two and I kind of guess OS X now too, and any issue I've had before has either been fixed by EasyBCD or by following this guide [ Register or Signin to view external links. ] other ways when it comes to hackintosh, but that's not relevant here).

Unfortunately that's not the case this time and I'm starting to get to my wits end trying to sort it out. If it wasn't for the fact that all of my programs/games etc. were on that particular OS I'd blitz it and start from scratch, but that's simply not an option as it's been my daily OS for far too long.

Now all 3 different OS are on different drives, not just partitions. For example Windows 8.1 is installed on an SSD, Windows 10 Tech Preview on a 2 TB HDD, and OS X on a separate 2 TB HDD.

I know that the Windows 8.1 drive isn't corrupt, it passes dskchk perfectly, I can use file explorer to see every single file in exactly the place it should be, nor are there any other issues with the SSD whatsoever, I just can't seem to boot from the drive.

Any help would be an absolute godsend at this point, I've been trying for literally 2 or 3 days to sort it out and if someone else can't give me a bit of insight and help I'm not too sure what to do.



Failing that, is there anyway to reinstall Windows but somehow keep all my game/program installs? Like create a system image of my Windows 8.1 partition from another OS and then restore it after installing Windows 8.1 from scratch? Whether it means cloning the drive or somehow linking files/registry values to another drive or whatever.
#2. Posted:
Sif-
  • Summer 2018
Status: Offline
Joined: Nov 23, 201311Year Member
Posts: 1,399
Reputation Power: 232
Status: Offline
Joined: Nov 23, 201311Year Member
Posts: 1,399
Reputation Power: 232
Use a linux OS they are awesome
#3. Posted:
315
  • Winter 2017
Status: Offline
Joined: Aug 15, 201410Year Member
Posts: 2,110
Reputation Power: 1329
Status: Offline
Joined: Aug 15, 201410Year Member
Posts: 2,110
Reputation Power: 1329
Waltee wrote To cut a long story short, I decided to try (and succeeded) to make my system a Hackintosh and run OS X Yosemite. Somewhere along the line, something has happened to my Windows 8.1 bootloader and I can't boot into it.

I can boot into OS X just fine, I can boot into my Windows 10 Tech Preview perfectly fine as well (it's what I'm currently using to type this), but whenever I try and boot into my Windows 8.1 Pro it immediately blue screens with a Boot/BCD/0xc0000000f (number of 0's may be off).

Now it's not the first time I've dabbled with multiple booting systems, I've always had access to multiple OS on this system whether it be Windows, Linux, a mix match of the two and I kind of guess OS X now too, and any issue I've had before has either been fixed by EasyBCD or by following this guide [ Register or Signin to view external links. ] other ways when it comes to hackintosh, but that's not relevant here).

Unfortunately that's not the case this time and I'm starting to get to my wits end trying to sort it out. If it wasn't for the fact that all of my programs/games etc. were on that particular OS I'd blitz it and start from scratch, but that's simply not an option as it's been my daily OS for far too long.

Now all 3 different OS are on different drives, not just partitions. For example Windows 8.1 is installed on an SSD, Windows 10 Tech Preview on a 2 TB HDD, and OS X on a separate 2 TB HDD.

I know that the Windows 8.1 drive isn't corrupt, it passes dskchk perfectly, I can use file explorer to see every single file in exactly the place it should be, nor are there any other issues with the SSD whatsoever, I just can't seem to boot from the drive.

Any help would be an absolute godsend at this point, I've been trying for literally 2 or 3 days to sort it out and if someone else can't give me a bit of insight and help I'm not too sure what to do.



Failing that, is there anyway to reinstall Windows but somehow keep all my game/program installs? Like create a system image of my Windows 8.1 partition from another OS and then restore it after installing Windows 8.1 from scratch? Whether it means cloning the drive or somehow linking files/registry values to another drive or whatever.



did you try using installation media to repair the drive?
#4. Posted:
Waltee
  • Powerhouse
Status: Offline
Joined: Oct 25, 201014Year Member
Posts: 450
Reputation Power: 15
Status: Offline
Joined: Oct 25, 201014Year Member
Posts: 450
Reputation Power: 15
Backtrack-5 wrote Use a linux OS they are awesome


Linux was my daily OS for about 4 years until I got more into the gaming side of things. I still enjoy using it every so often, but that's not really what my issue is about at the moment and won't help me solve it. Haha.


KiIIshots wrote
did you try using installation media to repair the drive?

I did, it doesn't work. The Startup Repair option doesn't even finish before saying it can't do it, and looking at the link I included I tried a whole bunch of things to try and get it to work but couldn't manage it.
Jump to:
You are viewing our Forum Archives. To view or take place in current topics click here.