• ×
    Information
    Need Windows 11 help?
    Check documents on compatibility, FAQs, upgrade information and available fixes.
    Windows 11 Support Center.
  • post a message
  • ×
    Information
    Need Windows 11 help?
    Check documents on compatibility, FAQs, upgrade information and available fixes.
    Windows 11 Support Center.
  • post a message
Guidelines
Seize the moment! nominate yourself or a tech enthusiast you admire & join the HP Community Experts!
Check out our WINDOWS 11 Support Center info about: OPTIMIZATION, KNOWN ISSUES, FAQs, VIDEOS AND MORE.
HP Recommended

OS=Windows 10. Laptop model=BCM9431Y

 

I've had and used the same pin for my laptop (I've use this for Word Processing, Spreadsheet, and the like, NO INTERNET) for almost a decade without any problem, until last week. Suddenly, out of the blue that "pin" failed to work.  As a result, I cannot access ANYTHING.  Since I am unable to access do I need to completely reset it to factory settings and if so will I loose the OS?

1 REPLY 1
HP Recommended

Hello,

 

I’ll walk you through this calmly and correctly, because you do NOT need to rush into a factory reset, and you will not automatically lose Windows.

First, I need to clarify one thing gently:

BCM9431Y is NOT a laptop model
It is a Broadcom Wi-Fi/Bluetooth adapter model.

That’s okay — it doesn’t change the solution, but it explains why support may have been confusing.


What actually happened (important)

On Windows 10, a PIN is not the same as a password.

  • The PIN is stored locally and tied to:

    • TPM (security chip)

    • Windows Hello credentials

  • It can suddenly fail if:

    • Windows update glitches

    • TPM state changes

    • Credential store corruption

    • Clock / security token mismatch

This can happen even on an offline system.

👉 This does not mean:

  • Your files are gone

  • Windows is broken

  • You must factory reset


Key question (answer this mentally first)

When you reach the Windows login screen, do you see “Sign-in options”?

If YES → you almost certainly do NOT need a factory reset.
If NO → recovery options still exist.

I’ll cover both cases.


Case 1: You can switch sign-in method (BEST case)

On the login screen:

  1. Click Sign-in options

  2. Look for:

    • Password icon (not PIN)

If you remember your Windows account password:

  • Use it to log in

  • Once logged in:

     
    SettingsAccountsSign-in optionsPINRemove
  • Then create a new PIN

No data loss
No OS reinstall


Case 2: PIN is the ONLY option shown (still fixable)

This usually means:

  • Local account with PIN-only login

  • Corrupted Windows Hello container

Step 1: Force Windows Recovery Environment

  1. Power on laptop

  2. As soon as Windows starts loading, hold power button to shut it off

  3. Repeat 3 times

  4. Windows will enter Recovery Mode


Step 2: Reset PIN (NOT factory reset)

In Recovery:

 

 
TroubleshootAdvanced OptionsStartup Settings

 

 

Restart → press 4 (Safe Mode)

In Safe Mode:

  • Windows often bypasses PIN

  • Allows password login or admin access

If successful:

  • Remove PIN

  • Recreate it


Case 3: Worst case — account inaccessible

Only if:

  • No password

  • No alternate sign-in

  • Safe Mode fails

Then yes, you may need to Reset this PC — BUT:

IMPORTANT:

Choose:

 

 
Reset this PC → Keep my files

 

This will:

  • Keep your documents

  • Keep Windows 10

  • Remove apps only

You will NOT lose the OS
You will NOT lose personal files


What NOT to do

  • Do not choose “Remove everything” unless you truly want a wipe

  • Do not assume the OS is lost

  • Do not use shady third-party unlock tools (risk of data loss)


Summary (plain answer to your question)

  • No, you do not automatically need a factory reset

  • No, resetting does not mean losing Windows

  • Yes, your files can usually be kept

  • This is a Windows PIN / credential issue, not hardware

I am an HP Employee. Although I am speaking for myself and not for HP.
Click Helpful = Yes to say Thank You.
Question / Concern Answered, Click "Accept as Solution"
† The opinions expressed above are the personal opinions of the authors, not of HP. By using this site, you accept the <a href="https://www8.hp.com/us/en/terms-of-use.html" class="udrlinesmall">Terms of Use</a> and <a href="/t5/custom/page/page-id/hp.rulespage" class="udrlinesmall"> Rules of Participation</a>.