I fired up a Windows 10 desktop that I haven't used in at least a year. It booted OK. Only problem I saw was the wireless network showed Connected, No Internet. I know my wireless Internet connection is good I thought I'd just reload the drivers. So in Device Manager I Uninstalled the wireless network adapter. On restart, I got STOP CODE NTFS FILE SYSTEM. The machine restarts, but continues to get this error and restarts. It continues to loop.
It's now in a scenario where when started it gets thru POST, the Windows logo shows, it says Preparing automatic repair and then the STOP CODE NTFS FILE SYSTEM comes up. It restarts and repeats.
I pulled the drive and connected it to another machine via SATA to USB adapter. The main partition shows as RAW. It's Disk 1 in the attached screen shot.
My question is where does the Windows logo and Preparing automatic repair come from? When it booted did it see that the main partition was RAW and then drop down to the Recovery partition? That's what I think is happening. Thoughts please.
It's now in a scenario where when started it gets thru POST, the Windows logo shows, it says Preparing automatic repair and then the STOP CODE NTFS FILE SYSTEM comes up. It restarts and repeats.
I pulled the drive and connected it to another machine via SATA to USB adapter. The main partition shows as RAW. It's Disk 1 in the attached screen shot.
My question is where does the Windows logo and Preparing automatic repair come from? When it booted did it see that the main partition was RAW and then drop down to the Recovery partition? That's what I think is happening. Thoughts please.