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- HP TE02-0250xt unable to boot after Windows 11 22H2 .NET upd...

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08-15-2023 08:38 PM
Solved! Go to Solution.
Accepted Solutions
09-11-2023 04:19 PM
I'm updating my original request for help on this forum for anyone out there with a similar problem who stumbles across this post in search of a solution.
I decided not to pursue HP support, because:
- my system stopped booting after a failed MS Windows update
- HP diagnostics showed that all physical components are functioning correctly
- my warranty (and therefore free HP support) has expired
To anyone who reads this: If you cannot boot to Windows, clone or image your system drive, first. Do this before making any change to your system or attempting any fix. If you can boot to Windows and are reading this, make a recovery USB stick from your system if you haven't already. Here is how to do it on Windows 11: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/create-a-recovery-drive-abb4691b-5324-6d4a-8766-73fab304...
Original problem: BSOD while booting to Windows, with the message: "After multiple tries, the operating system on your PC failed to start, so it needs to be repaired. Error code 0xc0000001". Further inspection of the C:\Windows\System32\Logfiles\Srt\SrtTrail.txt file showed: "a recently serviced boot binary is corrupt."
Final solution: Boot to the Windows Recovery environment on the Windows Recovery partition. Restore the system to a good System Restore point. This may not work for everyone.
I used rescuezilla 2.4.2 to image (and clone) my system. https://rescuezilla.com/
I used Rufus 4.2 to install rescuezilla to a USB stick. https://rufus.ie/en/
Rescuezilla is easy to use, recognized my internal drives, and created clones and images of my Windows System that behaved correctly when cloned/restored back to my internal NMVe M2 SSD. There are other cloning/imaging tools - YMMV.
Also, my HP TE02-0250xt requires the Intel RST/RAID drivers (iastorvd.inf) in order for the system to read/write my internal drives, even though my drives are not configured for RAID. If your situation is anything like mine, you'll have trouble with any WinPE/WinRE-based external USB drive that wasn't created on your system before it stopped booting.
On the other hand, rescuezilla (and clonezilla) read my internal drives "out of the box", are free, and the USB sticks can be created on any other system you have access to.
I'm glad I imaged my system drive before I tried to fix it, because I had to try a bunch of things before I found the solution. Many of those attempted fixes screwed my system drive up so badly that I had to restore the NVMe SSD from my backup image several times before I found the solution.
Restoring from a System Restore point is only one possible fix, but it worked for me. Greg Carmack (MS community moderator, MS Windows MVP) has several posts on MS Community forums with suggestions for fixing boot problems. This post was helpful : https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/all/windows-in-automatic-repair-loop-get-log-file-...
08-16-2023 11:09 AM
Additional info from OP:
Details for my 2022 HP TE02-0250xt:
* i5 12400
* RTX 3060 Ti
* 16GB DDR4-3200
* 256GB NVMe M2 SSD
* 1TB SATA HDD
* Windows 11 Home 64
On 8/15, from Recovery > Troubleshoot > Command Prompt, I ran DISM:
> dism /image:c:\ /cleanup-image /scanhealth
dism reported: No component store corruption detected. The operation completed successfully.
08-19-2023 02:33 AM
Hi @still_confused1,
Welcome to the HP support community.
Please help us with the laptop serial number or the product number on a private message for further assistance.
Here is the link to find the product number:- Click here
In order to access your private messages, click the private message icon on the upper right corner of your HP Support Community profile, next to your profile Name.
Alden4
HP Support
HP Support Community Moderator
08-21-2023 12:53 AM
08-21-2023 01:03 AM
Hi @still_confused1,
Thank you for your response,
Due to limited support, I would request you contact our HP Support and our Support Engineers should be able to sort this out. HP Support can be reached by clicking on the following link.
Please feel free to contact us here anytime you need any further assistance.
Have a great day!
Alden4
HP Support
HP Support Community Moderator
09-11-2023 04:19 PM
I'm updating my original request for help on this forum for anyone out there with a similar problem who stumbles across this post in search of a solution.
I decided not to pursue HP support, because:
- my system stopped booting after a failed MS Windows update
- HP diagnostics showed that all physical components are functioning correctly
- my warranty (and therefore free HP support) has expired
To anyone who reads this: If you cannot boot to Windows, clone or image your system drive, first. Do this before making any change to your system or attempting any fix. If you can boot to Windows and are reading this, make a recovery USB stick from your system if you haven't already. Here is how to do it on Windows 11: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/create-a-recovery-drive-abb4691b-5324-6d4a-8766-73fab304...
Original problem: BSOD while booting to Windows, with the message: "After multiple tries, the operating system on your PC failed to start, so it needs to be repaired. Error code 0xc0000001". Further inspection of the C:\Windows\System32\Logfiles\Srt\SrtTrail.txt file showed: "a recently serviced boot binary is corrupt."
Final solution: Boot to the Windows Recovery environment on the Windows Recovery partition. Restore the system to a good System Restore point. This may not work for everyone.
I used rescuezilla 2.4.2 to image (and clone) my system. https://rescuezilla.com/
I used Rufus 4.2 to install rescuezilla to a USB stick. https://rufus.ie/en/
Rescuezilla is easy to use, recognized my internal drives, and created clones and images of my Windows System that behaved correctly when cloned/restored back to my internal NMVe M2 SSD. There are other cloning/imaging tools - YMMV.
Also, my HP TE02-0250xt requires the Intel RST/RAID drivers (iastorvd.inf) in order for the system to read/write my internal drives, even though my drives are not configured for RAID. If your situation is anything like mine, you'll have trouble with any WinPE/WinRE-based external USB drive that wasn't created on your system before it stopped booting.
On the other hand, rescuezilla (and clonezilla) read my internal drives "out of the box", are free, and the USB sticks can be created on any other system you have access to.
I'm glad I imaged my system drive before I tried to fix it, because I had to try a bunch of things before I found the solution. Many of those attempted fixes screwed my system drive up so badly that I had to restore the NVMe SSD from my backup image several times before I found the solution.
Restoring from a System Restore point is only one possible fix, but it worked for me. Greg Carmack (MS community moderator, MS Windows MVP) has several posts on MS Community forums with suggestions for fixing boot problems. This post was helpful : https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/all/windows-in-automatic-repair-loop-get-log-file-...