As an IT tech in the past, I used to use the prospect of reloading Windows as a pain point for my regular users who professionally destroyed their machines over and over. " Sorry, but looks like we're gonna have to start over...again" serves as a great learning experience for people who refuse to listen to your directions over and over on how to keep their machines running smoothly. With that being said, I eventually would allow to them that there is a way to repair windows fairly reliably after they had their collective heart attacks at the prospect of losing their data , but say " DONT DO THAT AGAIN!" . At any rate, I am glad DISM and SFC work like theyre supposed to.
Customers that regularly trash their systems is just more money for me. I don't mind fixing the same or similar problem over and over again. If a customer doesn't listen they just have to pay me again to fix it. It all pays the same, doesn't bother me at all.
Your content is great! Every video should be like this, straight up, no unnecessary explanation, and short videos about complicated things, and well explained tutorial. This is the best tech channel ever. Earned a sub, Rich!
You have right, but i like when explanation is coming but not like some professionnal explain like complicate for show that are very clever and some peopel they repeat just for repeat and they do not know what to do and what they said too, copying, that why i prefer too explaination for see if peopel are truth or not or says a sheet !! iam agrre with for 50 %
See, this is the stuff I have a hard time finding when you need to actually fix a broken Windows installation. Thank you very much! Just replace the bad ones from an image, plain and simple video.
you are such a life saver!!! ran into this problem on my grandmothers computer i built for her. had a recent windows update fail and corrupted it soooo bad it wouldnt boot and starup repair just laughed at it. i knew how to run it on a local machine but couldnt find the information on how to run it from a recovery usb in a clear concise way. awesome job
Excellent! I've made your tutorials required viewing for our techs. I'm fed up with hiring computer science graduates that only know how to code in various languages but know shit when it comes to repairing Windows. The academic curriculum is severely lacking.
I want to thank you for these videos! I am CompTIA A+ certified, and there is ZERO reference to this valuable info! You da man! oh, and a company i worked for had a policy of reimaging drives rather than troubleshooting the computer.... must not have seen your videos! lol
Suggestion for a future video in the series: Things you should do BEFORE windows breaks to make it easier to revover. Turning registry backup back on ( See th-cam.com/video/eY76UVXxENo/w-d-xo.html ) of course, but should I use the windows scan disk tool in properties? Should I optimize my SSDs? Create a recovery point? Anything special I should back up to a USB drive to make recovery easier?
Instead of reloading Windows, I just built a new machine. I had the parts laying around and was due for an upgrade anyway. I'll try giving this a shot since I didn't nuke my old rig's drives. Maybe this'll stop my old "nuke it" habits. Thanks for the knowledge!
Thanks for this video and the last one also. Have noted down all the command. In the future when I have a Windows that fails to boot, I can "try" to fix it. Recently, I migrated a Windows 7 on a Asrock Z68 Pro3 with RAID1 configuration (one drive hardware failing) to a non-RAID SSD drive using MiniTool Partition Wizard - Migrate OS to SSD. That ended with error BlInitializeLibrary failed 0xc0000001 at boot. After many hours of trial and error, I was able to fix it with DISM++ (found on Sergei Strelec Boot CD/USB) - Toolkit - Bootmgr repair. Thereafter upgraded to Windows 10.
I came across your videos a couple of weeks ago. I took your tips on how to deal with the 100% Disk problem and they worked great. I'm interested in using the two tools you mentioned in part one of this series. My question is: will those tools work effectively if the window search service is disabled? I disabled that service to lower my disk usage? I subscribed and I am still reviewing your older videos for helpful tips. You do a great job making these things seem simple which I know are not that simple.
Great in depth tutorial !! Just one question - does it work if the files on the USB are newer than the offline drive? So for example the unbootable system has Winbdows 21H2 but the downloaded ISO is windows 22H2 ?
Thanks for your videos. I did the reinstall windows many times. I'm downloading some of your videos onto my tablet so I can see watch the instruction incase I need it as there is no way I would remember them.
I'm here because Windows 11 screwed up after an update restart. It's a shame that Microsoft does such a terrible job with its updates that its customers have to be terrified every time they get notifications to restart to install updates.
@@aya.el1001 No, still an issue. I have done two subsequent update installations and my screen goes into a perpetual flashing state after the update - unusable. Then I had to uninstall the update only to have Windows bug me with a new message that my computer needs an update. So frustrating.
I swear! Those updates are such a mess and whatever how many times you reschedule it to not do the updates one day u will find out the system did it by itself and then start the problems 💀…
I rarely comment but took this extra step to say this is a very useful video very nicely explained that helped solve my windows issue which wasn't booting, I am extremely thrilled and thankful and appreciate the knowledge sharing!
Thanks for the videos!! I think it would help if you started the video with a screenshot of the error message as to why it won't boot so you know which repair to try.
SFC fixes a lot of problems with Windows. It's not just fixing one specific error message. SFC should be at least tried with all error messages. The tool scans Windows system files for corrupt files and replaces them with good ones if it finds any that have been corrupted.
So I am an IT guy since 30 years for quite a few companies, many hundreds of systems... and it is literally now over a decade i needed DISM or SFC or any other tool to restore Windows files. I am curious: what exactly do people do to ruin their Windows in a way that DISM would help? I mean as a normal user they can't overwrite anything, even as an admin you can't overwrite the system files, since you are not "TrustedInstaller". And if a Windows Update fails due to power outage or crash or anything while updating, NTFS will roll the changes back. So what do people do nowadays since ~Windows Vista to be able to ruin Windows files at all? Really curious :)
Problem is even if you use it, it doesn't work. By the way do you know how you can make a backup of Windows 8.1 with the programs you have installed and their configurations?
I'm not sure how the Windows image gets corrupted. It could be numerous things. It could be a bad drive, a bad Windows update, or just Windows eating itself (corrupting its own files). I typically spend the majority of my time figuring out how to fix it and spend very little time trying to figure out how it happened.
combination of unstable 'gamer brand' RAM and motherboards with onboard unstable 'gamer brand' chipsets System messes up on its own over time. 🤷♀️ The user can even be some random USPS-mailman who never uses it for more than a minute a month to pay bills and then something silly like the navigation pane in explorer will just disappear permanently until SFC fixes it. Odd stuff like that. TrustedInstaller is as inbred as a duke on an unstable system xD
@@CyberCPU Fair enough... would be so interesting to me, how it happens. So if at one point you do find the time to see how it happened I would love to see a video about it - probably will help many as well :)...
Hi, great video I've used these tools before from others descriptions, but you explain it all way clearer. Unfortunately no bueno for me... I have the same windows version, exactly the same dism version and all I get in dism is "error 87: the cleanup-image option is unknown". Sfc gives me: Windows Resource Protection could not start the repair service. Can I do anything else to save this Windows 10?
Hey so far its a great video but for some reason I don't see that Install.esd file or install.win , I do see at the very bottom a files called install.swm and it's basically the biggest file in the sources folder. Could this maybe be it?
Hi I've been having these issues on 2 computers i tried everything you've pointed out. I Had no issues going step by step but when i restart computer still doesn't boot into windows??? Ive tried everything and nothing seems to help i just get the recovery screen loop. What am i doing wrong?
Very useful! Thank for the effort. The $64 question for me and the one I couldn't solve for almost a year and I hope you ir someone here has the knowledge regarding that. The problem is my recovery cannot see any of my drives at all. Though Windows is running flawlessly. I do regular updates when they don't have problems. The system is 4 years old the hardware is almost one year old . 13 Gen CPU with Z690 MB. This is driving me crazy lol. If i took my NVMe and plugged it in my nephew's PC (6600x CPU and b560 MB), the recovery works perfectly. One more thing is that I have to make my recovery drive visible otherwise I cannot even go to recovery environment which is weird.
Just got it fixed few days ago, It turned out you have to disable Intel Rapid Storage Technology in BIOS. Then recovery environment will see all your drives
I am having a problem with a windows update KB5025221not installing and it is keeping other updates from installing. I ran the Dism restorehealth command as per the previous video but got the following error DISM fails The source file could not be downloaded.
Hello, Something i did not understand about a directory about "temp" ? why you delete it and creat it and after execute the commande with scratch with temp directory ? between 7:23 and 8:01,
I forgot to delete the temp directory before filming the video and I wanted to show how to use the command to make a directory. Since the directory was already there, I showed how to remove it so that I could show how to create it.
@@CyberCPU Ok i understand, what does it mean scratchdir, it s need a temp file for resole the error message before, and you make a directory with md temp, and target it on the comand with scratch dir and no message error !!; is that information i did not had before, or maybe may english it s so bad and i did not understand id you said it on vidéo, sorry !
awesome video - finally someone that can explain the basics of this function - that said any suggestions when a message pops up to say DISM does not support a Windows Vista or earlier operating system. Thing is I have a Windows 10 I am trying to fix that is from 2022 and the iso image is 2023/4. I followed everything you had shared getting all the drive letters correct. I have to recover my system offline using a recovery disk - woke up next day with my computer unable to boot. I use UEFI to boot and I checked the EFI boot files etc and that is all in order now.
Something is wrong. I tried all your recommendations for DISM and it still says "the source files could not be found. Use the "source" option to specify the location of the files that are required to restore the feature." and then it specifies a Microsoft link. Confusing...
This issue occurs because Microsoft's 'install.esd' file comes packaged with multiple versions of Windows (Home, Pro, etc.). When using the DISM command in the video, DISM fails as a result. It worked in the video because as he states @ 3:52 "...I'm not gonna do that because I've already created one for myself." It seems he created a Windows install USB in a different manner from in the video or he created one a long time ago before Microsoft started bundling multiple versions within a single .esd file. We can fix this problem with a couple extra commands. For this entire demonstration, assume your Windows boot drive is C:, your Windows install USB is D:, and your scratch directory is 'C:\Temp'. Make sure to make modifications to any of these following commands if you're using alternate paths. First we need to extract the correct Windows image from the 'install.esd' file. Type the following command into CMD: DISM /Get-WimInfo /WimFile:D:\install.esd This command will output the 'index' values for each version of Windows within the 'install.esd' file. Make note of the index value that correlates to your Windows version. As of the Windows 10 22H2 MCT .exe, Windows 10 Home is index 1 and Windows 10 Pro is index 6. For the rest of the demonstration, let's assume you're using Windows 10 Home so we shall use index 1. Now that we have the index value of the Windows version we need, let's extract it. We can extract it to the flash drive or the boot drive. For this demonstration, let's extract to the boot drive. DISM /Export-Image /SourceImageFile:D:\sources\install.esd /SourceIndex:1 /DestinationImageFile:C:\install.wim /Compress:Max /CheckIntegrity This extracts the Windows 10 Home image file to the root of the boot drive (C:) as a '.wim' file. The '/SourceIndex:1' switch specifies the index for the Windows version, '1' is the index for Windows 10 Home; if you're not using Home (Pro, etc.) then change '1' in this switch to the correct index value that we retrieved earlier. The '/Compress:Max' switch compresses the '.wim' file to use less space but will take longer to do; if you don't mind using more space, you can use '/Compress:Fast' or '/Compress:None'. Now we can actually fix the issue! DISM /Image:C:\ /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth /Source:C:\install.wim /ScratchDir:C:\Temp If you still get the error, check your syntax carefully and attempt the above command one more time (Hint: press the 'Up' arrow key on your keyboard to retrieve the last executed command). If you still get the error even after checking your syntax and trying again, attempt to re-export the 'install.esd' file using the '/Export-Image' command but this time use 'Compress:None'; this will take up far more space but may fix any compression/decompression errors that may have occurred. This works for Windows 11 too! Hope this helps!
This issue occurs because Microsoft's 'install.esd' file comes packaged with multiple versions of Windows (Home, Pro, etc.). When using the DISM command in the video, DISM fails as a result. It worked in the video because as he states @ 3:52 "I'm not gonna do that because I've already created one for myself." It seems he created a Windows install USB in a different manner from in the video or he created one a long time ago before Microsoft started bundling multiple versions within a single .esd file. We can fix this problem with a couple extra commands. For this entire demonstration, assume your Windows boot drive is C:, your Windows install USB is D:, and your scratch directory is 'C:\Temp'. Make sure to make modifications to any of these following commands if you're using alternate paths. First we need to extract the correct Windows image from the 'install.esd' file. Type the following command into CMD: DISM /Get-WimInfo /WimFile:D:\install.esd This command will output the 'index' values for each version of Windows within the 'install.esd' file. Make note of the index value that correlates to your Windows version. As of the Windows 10 22H2 MCT .exe, Windows 10 Home is index 1 and Windows 10 Pro is index 6. For the rest of the demonstration, let's assume you're using Windows 10 Home so we shall use index 1. Now that we have the index value of the Windows version we need, let's extract it. We can extract it to the flash drive or the boot drive. For this demonstration, let's extract to the boot drive. DISM /Export-Image /SourceImageFile:D:\sources\install.esd /SourceIndex:1 /DestinationImageFile:C:\install.wim /Compress:Max /CheckIntegrity This extracts the Windows 10 Home image file to the root of the boot drive (C:) as a '.wim' file. The '/SourceIndex:1' switch specifies the index for the Windows version, '1' is the index for Windows 10 Home; if you're not using Home (Pro, etc.) then change '1' in this switch to the correct index value that we retrieved earlier. The '/Compress:Max' switch compresses the '.wim' file to use less space but will take longer to do; if you don't mind using more space, you can use '/Compress:Fast' or '/Compress:None'. Now we can actually fix the issue! DISM /Image:C:\ /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth /Source:C:\install.wim /ScratchDir:C:\Temp If you still get the error, check your syntax carefully and attempt the above command one more time (Hint: press the 'Up' arrow key on your keyboard to retrieve the last executed command). If you still get the error even after checking your syntax and trying again, attempt to re-export the 'install.esd' file using the '/Export-Image' command but this time use 'Compress:None'; this will take up far more space but may fix any compression/decompression errors that may have occurred. This works for Windows 11 too! Hope this helps!
god damnit! i could´ve used this 2 or 3 years ago i think...some day i just absolutely couldnt get into my windows installation anymore....my brother is pretty good with computers, but i dont know if he tried to do what you did, or if he even found any tutorial for this kind of way to repair it...if this ever happens again, i´ll definetly try to use your video! great work!
Hi again, what I forgot to mention was the shortcuts that I spent so long to remember. And after a couple hours from posting a comment on here. I remembered. I got it and it takes less than 5mins to execute. But system restore points from an earlier date or time prior to the non-bootable Windows 10 OS. Is a must if you want to resolve this problem via system restore point. If anyone wants it. Let me know. Thank you
My system won’t boot and I ran the original dsm command without needing the scratch directory. The scan worked and recovery was successful. But my system still won’t boot into windows
Amazing advice mate. Pssed I sent mine the india to get it up and running again. Come to think about it, never realised till now, 2 years have gone fast I wonder if they've managed to fix it for me. I didn't get a phone number from them. But what the hey!! They'll call me 😅😢😂
Never had to do this at all on Windows 7 and 8/8.1 as those OSes were super reliable and rarely needed repair but Windows 10 is a completely different story, in corporate environments we just wipe and load if the OS usually Windows 10 is corrupted. Alternatively the windows install USB does have another option called Refresh this PC which is less time consuming and does the same thing.
Thank you for this video. Unfortunately, I run into this error response when I try to run the DISM: "Error 87 The /Image option that is specified points to a running Windows installation. To service the running operation system, use the /Online option" What am I doing wrong?
I tried this method booting from an USB drive as you mentioned, but when I run DISM command, I always get this error: 0x800f081f. Any suggestions? Thanks in advance.
This issue occurs because Microsoft's 'install.esd' file comes packaged with multiple versions of Windows (Home, Pro, etc.). When using the DISM command in the video, DISM fails as a result. It worked in the video because as he states @ 3:52 "...I'm not gonna do that because I've already created one for myself." It seems he created a Windows install USB in a different manner from in the video or he created one a long time ago before Microsoft started bundling multiple versions within a single .esd file. We can fix this problem with a couple extra commands. For this entire demonstration, assume your Windows boot drive is C:, your Windows install USB is D:, and your scratch directory is 'C:\Temp'. Make sure to make modifications to any of these following commands if you're using alternate paths. First we need to extract the correct Windows image from the 'install.esd' file. Type the following command into CMD: DISM /Get-WimInfo /WimFile:D:\install.esd This command will output the 'index' values for each version of Windows within the 'install.esd' file. Make note of the index value that correlates to your Windows version. As of the Windows 10 22H2 MCT .exe, Windows 10 Home is index 1 and Windows 10 Pro is index 6. For the rest of the demonstration, let's assume you're using Windows 10 Home so we shall use index 1. Now that we have the index value of the Windows version we need, let's extract it. We can extract it to the flash drive or the boot drive. For this demonstration, let's extract to the boot drive. DISM /Export-Image /SourceImageFile:D:\sources\install.esd /SourceIndex:1 /DestinationImageFile:C:\install.wim /Compress:Max /CheckIntegrity This extracts the Windows 10 Home image file to the root of the boot drive (C:) as a '.wim' file. The '/SourceIndex:1' switch specifies the index for the Windows version, '1' is the index for Windows 10 Home; if you're not using Home (Pro, etc.) then change '1' in this switch to the correct index value that we retrieved earlier. The '/Compress:Max' switch compresses the '.wim' file to use less space but will take longer to do; if you don't mind using more space, you can use '/Compress:Fast' or '/Compress:None'. Now we can actually fix the issue! DISM /Image:C:\ /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth /Source:C:\install.wim /ScratchDir:C:\Temp If you still get the error, check your syntax carefully and attempt the above command one more time (Hint: press the 'Up' arrow key on your keyboard to retrieve the last executed command). If you still get the error even after checking your syntax and trying again, attempt to re-export the 'install.esd' file using the '/Export-Image' command but this time use 'Compress:None'; this will take up far more space but may fix any compression/decompression errors that may have occurred. This works for Windows 11 too! Hope this helps!
Dism /get-wiminfo /wimfile:x: (usb letter) \install.esd doesnt works neither wth esd, neither with wim it says "error:2, can't file dthefile... Am I at a dead point? Or can i extract it with my notebook?just try on notebook and got samecerror 😔😔😔😔😔
Ok, I've extracted the install.wam I need and put it on an usb key with no compression. Still get the 0x800f081f "impossible find the source file" after it reached 100%.I'm pretty sure I have windows 11 Pro. Ihave the old old ol key that I used to install, I will try again with tat... The log is a poem, and it says I have corrupetpted files... But if dism is needed to repair them....
@@aravitz857 I don't know of a way to repair a broken registry without just restoring a backup. That's why I recently did a video on how to reenable registry backup. The system that inspired that video had to be reloaded.
My Windows 10 won't start. Safe mode too. BSOD - CRITICAL PROCESS DIED. I try to use DISM but keep getting error 0x800f0801. Do you have an idea how to deal with it?
I think to myself what if Windows not booting? after watching your first video. today saw your 2nd vid :D thanks a lot for the answer. like to ask - do we need the exact version of Windows? i hv Windows 10 Pro on my usb, but most of my friends hv Home version. will it work?
Home/pro doesn't matter. All Windows install USBs will have home and Pro. The correct build of Windows would be a good idea. However, not all files change in every build, so a different build isn't a deal breaker. It might work still.
This issue occurs because Microsoft's 'install.esd' file comes packaged with multiple versions of Windows (Home, Pro, etc.). When using the DISM command in the video, DISM fails as a result. It worked in the video because as he states @ 3:52 "...I'm not gonna do that because I've already created one for myself." It seems he created a Windows install USB in a different manner from in the video or he created one a long time ago before Microsoft started bundling multiple versions within a single .esd file. We can fix this problem with a couple extra commands. For this entire demonstration, assume your Windows boot drive is C:, your Windows install USB is D:, and your scratch directory is 'C:\Temp'. Make sure to make modifications to any of these following commands if you're using alternate paths. First we need to extract the correct Windows image from the 'install.esd' file. Type the following command into CMD: DISM /Get-WimInfo /WimFile:D:\install.esd This command will output the 'index' values for each version of Windows within the 'install.esd' file. Make note of the index value that correlates to your Windows version. As of the Windows 10 22H2 MCT .exe, Windows 10 Home is index 1 and Windows 10 Pro is index 6. For the rest of the demonstration, let's assume you're using Windows 10 Home so we shall use index 1. Now that we have the index value of the Windows version we need, let's extract it. We can extract it to the flash drive or the boot drive. For this demonstration, let's extract to the boot drive. DISM /Export-Image /SourceImageFile:D:\sources\install.esd /SourceIndex:1 /DestinationImageFile:C:\install.wim /Compress:Max /CheckIntegrity This extracts the Windows 10 Home image file to the root of the boot drive (C:) as a '.wim' file. The '/SourceIndex:1' switch specifies the index for the Windows version, '1' is the index for Windows 10 Home; if you're not using Home (Pro, etc.) then change '1' in this switch to the correct index value that we retrieved earlier. The '/Compress:Max' switch compresses the '.wim' file to use less space but will take longer to do; if you don't mind using more space, you can use '/Compress:Fast' or '/Compress:None'. Now we can actually fix the issue! DISM /Image:C:\ /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth /Source:C:\install.wim /ScratchDir:C:\Temp If you still get the error, check your syntax carefully and attempt the above command one more time (Hint: press the 'Up' arrow key on your keyboard to retrieve the last executed command). If you still get the error even after checking your syntax and trying again, attempt to re-export the 'install.esd' file using the '/Export-Image' command but this time use 'Compress:None'; this will take up far more space but may fix any compression/decompression errors that may have occurred. This works for Windows 11 too! Hope this helps!
I've been a tech for years and never knew how to properly use sfc BTW I would use diskpart to list the disks to find out which drive is which or open regedit and export a key so you can get the dialog box that shows you drives...
So like the motherboard manufacture instructions or whatever are they supposed to be in the box? I bought my laptop like 5 years ago… i have no idea where that is… is there a place online where you can find that info?
For me it keeps throwing me an error saying that the source files can't be found even when specifying source should be on my USB drive. Sfc command did say it found some errors and fixed them but after booting my windows still starts to load meaning I see the loading circle going but then it just restarts. I even tried fixing the bcd but nothing seems to work. About five years worth of work, bookmarks, files etc down the drain I guess 😭
Thank you very much. If you're still reading these comments, what do you do if your Install file is "Install.swm", not .esd or .wim? Because often, the "Install.swm" is split into 2 or 3 files. What would the syntax be then?
My last pc wouldn't have worked with this. For some reason not only it doesn't boot, but it doesn't boot in recovery and if I put a bootable usb I get a broken screen and it never starts.
I had to physically swap the hard drive with another one with an OS installed on it for it to boot again, btw And it still doesn't boot from usb, always broken screen. It boots from dvd tho.
Thankyou solved a windows 11 computer that kept coming up asking to repair I had to look at sfc scan now command solved it 👍 sfc from recovery sfc /scannow /offbootdir={drive}\ /offwindir={drive}\windowsb
I had to do this just last week because I deleted a boot partition that was showing as an extra boot device in my Bios but only when the bios was in easy mode which was weird. In a program called "Easy EFUI" it was listed as hidden and I made sure it was the one I didn't need but when I deleted it bam my windows would no longer boot. I did not know about this video back then but when I made the recovery thumb drive and tried to do the start up repair as well as SFC and it failed and gave me an BSOD error that said could not fix disk or something and then gave some generic exception code. I eventually and I still don't really know how I did it used diskpart to rebuild the MBR I think, and even getting a few errors on the steps I followed from the internet, I somehow magically managed to get it fix lol. I think I did the same steps as in the video but in a different way?🤷♂ Anyhow I'm back up and running again and have once again learned never to mess with partitions at least not to delete any when I don't really know what I'm doing. I am glad though I did have enough primitive knowledge to at least fix it and the best part is the extra boot device no longer shows up in my bios as an option, was quite along day though. LOL
Wish you had this up earlier lol but fortunately I had a full clone backup of my laptop so was able to restore my laptop from that once I remember I had it... 4hrs later lol ugh...
1. Is this process called "imaging" when IT technicians say they have to re-image the machine? 2. Do I have to back-up my personal files and data before running these tools? Does it affect my personal files and data in the same partition?
Most of my windows boot problems were hardware issues… like rams and HDDs but unfortunately i had to go through all the software diagnostics and possible fixes before realizing it was damaged hardware.. i think windows is developing a habit of destroying your memory with every release…. I have a drawer in my office full of pc and laptop RAMs also my humble advice for anyone using hdds .. clone your boot drive once every month or two onto an ssd or a spare drive ..
I have the same problem, I had to extract the image on another computer, but still gave me thata errro after 100% "no source file found". Unfortunateli looks likeca lot ofvus has this problem, but after 4 months this video was abandoned. I guest ppl has just a few apps on their pc lately an prefer to reset clean. Someone does eveything by phone, doesn't even know what a command line is. I', m 40, but I remember ms-dos...
@@brunobellucci275 yeah, i can't imagine reinstalling all that stuff i had on my PC. Even when i change my mobo i have clone every disk to new ssd 1:1. My windows current installation is 6 years old, but some programs wich i clone from old HDD's are like 10 years. And they still running on the third system already...
I have tons of customizations, software and other, it will take a life to restore! I used to work with it, I'm using the pc of the office and notebook, but they have 1/50 of the software I have in my pc. And dropboc and other backup cloud software will recognize the pc as new one and I will have Tera to rebackup....
Hey Yo! Per your video "Water Cooling a mid-range Graphics Card" It's too late, I spent $589 on an ASUS RTX3060 Ti. It works great, but when I'm streaming/gaming it gets 82c and I am thinking maybe an extra $200 for a kit would serve me well; taking off 30c temp. Lession I learned: The future of gaming needs more than 8GB VRAM. I'm Resigned to 1080p/ultra, but I think I can add value by by stabilizing my RTX temps. What do you think? I would've posted on your other video, but comments were limited 😂
I run most games on my 3060 at 3440x1440 to match my ultra wide. I'm very happy with the water block. It was definitely worth it. However, it's hard to find water blocks for mid-range GPUs. Most manufacturers don't make them. Not sure what you mean by comments being limited.
@@CyberCPU I've never water cooled my system before, and I wonder if it would be a weird change. What happens if I forget to turn my pump on, or I forget to top off my water reservoir? Wouldn't that spell disaster for the expensive GPU? Kinda scary for me to think about ;) It wouldn't let me post a comment on your other video for whatever reason. 🤷♂️ Anyway, thanks for your response 💯
@@DaKloneLiving That's weird that it wouldn't let you comment on the other video. I'm not sure why. When you water-cool a system the pump and everything comes on with the power button just like your air cooler. If done properly with high quality parts it should be fine. It takes a LONG time for water to evaporate from the reservoir. My main system was flushed and topped off well over a year ago and I haven't touched it. It runs every day. No problems.
So I tried doing this after my PC stopped recognizing the boot drive after a failed Windows update, but Windows just stays in the load screen with the blue window and spinning dots forever when I try to boot with the USB connected and won't even get to the "Repair your computer" screen. Does that mean the drive is totally corrupt and dead?
I do not want to repair my internal HD but and external HD that I have connected using SATA-USB cable to another USB port. That possible? I should then refer to that external HD in each of the commands you enter?
I can’t get any of the recovery stuff to work at all. Everytime I lose power my computer refused to load windows. I’ve tried every fix available online and none of it works. I’ve reformatted the drive, and done a fresh install about 5 times but everytime I try and restart it gets stuck on the motherboard loading screen. I’ve tried several hard drives, moved the hard drive to a separate pc and it worked ok but refuses to work on my pc.
My question is can I fix my boot from my backup hard drive so that my main drive can be fixed by the win. 10 repair disk in my CD? My main hard drive is stuck on the "choose your keyboard layout" it goes right to this screen and my keyboard and mouse are dead. I cannot access anything. My F keys do not work nor my Del, or Esc. so I cannot get in to bios even at start up. I can however unplug the main hard drive, boot up with my backup drive and at least get to the windows install/repair which will allow me to get to the CMD screen. is there a way to change my boot order so my main drive can access the install/fix CD?
What can I do if there is no cursor on the screen after inserting the USB stick with the Windows mediacreationtool into the defective Windows laptop? Do you have any advice?
i got this message: there is system repair pending which requires reboot to complete, restart windows and run sfc again, when i restart the min windows logo shows i get blue screen of death 😢
Dism spits out this error: 0x800f081f the source files could not be found. This happens even when I use /source and point to the install.esd on my USB drive. What do I do now?
Love your vids so so helpful. You got anything on how to reset my log in pin.. besides using Microsoft log ID password that requires a verification text that I cant get on my iPhone.. why? .. no clue but I don't get them anymore and cant log back into this OS that I fixed with your HELP !
As an IT tech in the past, I used to use the prospect of reloading Windows as a pain point for my regular users who professionally destroyed their machines over and over. " Sorry, but looks like we're gonna have to start over...again" serves as a great learning experience for people who refuse to listen to your directions over and over on how to keep their machines running smoothly.
With that being said, I eventually would allow to them that there is a way to repair windows fairly reliably after they had their collective heart attacks at the prospect of losing their data , but say " DONT DO THAT AGAIN!" . At any rate, I am glad DISM and SFC work like theyre supposed to.
Customers that regularly trash their systems is just more money for me. I don't mind fixing the same or similar problem over and over again. If a customer doesn't listen they just have to pay me again to fix it. It all pays the same, doesn't bother me at all.
Your content is great! Every video should be like this, straight up, no unnecessary explanation, and short videos about complicated things, and well explained tutorial. This is the best tech channel ever. Earned a sub, Rich!
You have right, but i like when explanation is coming but not like some professionnal explain like complicate for show that are very clever and some peopel they repeat just for repeat and they do not know what to do and what they said too, copying, that why i prefer too explaination for see if peopel are truth or not or says a sheet !! iam agrre with for 50 %
Computer tech since 1999. Just discovered your clear and friendly channel. Love it. Subscribed.
May of 99 here!! That's to cool to find another older tech. I seem to work with kids now days.
Me too, started on my own as a independent Tech in March of 2000. This guys content is absolutely AWESOME> Thank you Rick.
See, this is the stuff I have a hard time finding when you need to actually fix a broken Windows installation. Thank you very much! Just replace the bad ones from an image, plain and simple video.
2 months ago I reloaded windows. Now I am crying lol. If only I had known. This one is a keeper!
Same thing happened to me like a few weeks ago. Better to know for the future!
Glad it helped.
you are such a life saver!!! ran into this problem on my grandmothers computer i built for her. had a recent windows update fail and corrupted it soooo bad it wouldnt boot and starup repair just laughed at it. i knew how to run it on a local machine but couldnt find the information on how to run it from a recovery usb in a clear concise way. awesome job
Excellent! I've made your tutorials required viewing for our techs. I'm fed up with hiring computer science graduates that only know how to code in various languages but know shit when it comes to repairing Windows. The academic curriculum is severely lacking.
That's flattering. Thank you.
@@CyberCPUyour knowledge is most valuable for all of us.
I want to thank you for these videos! I am CompTIA A+ certified, and there is ZERO reference to this valuable info! You da man! oh, and a company i worked for had a policy of reimaging drives rather than troubleshooting the computer.... must not have seen your videos! lol
Hey man, this is great stuff. I've had many headaches trying to run the dism command offline before and this video gets it straight to the point lol
Thanks for this series. Definitely will be using this for my job.
THANKS! PC hard crashed and stuck in a preparing automatic repair loop. These are the only instructions that worked for me. You're my hero! 😻
Suggestion for a future video in the series: Things you should do BEFORE windows breaks to make it easier to revover. Turning registry backup back on ( See th-cam.com/video/eY76UVXxENo/w-d-xo.html ) of course, but should I use the windows scan disk tool in properties? Should I optimize my SSDs? Create a recovery point? Anything special I should back up to a USB drive to make recovery easier?
Instead of reloading Windows, I just built a new machine. I had the parts laying around and was due for an upgrade anyway. I'll try giving this a shot since I didn't nuke my old rig's drives. Maybe this'll stop my old "nuke it" habits. Thanks for the knowledge!
Thanks for this video and the last one also. Have noted down all the command. In the future when I have a Windows that fails to boot, I can "try" to fix it. Recently, I migrated a Windows 7 on a Asrock Z68 Pro3 with RAID1 configuration (one drive hardware failing) to a non-RAID SSD drive using MiniTool Partition Wizard - Migrate OS to SSD. That ended with error BlInitializeLibrary failed 0xc0000001 at boot. After many hours of trial and error, I was able to fix it with DISM++ (found on Sergei Strelec Boot CD/USB) - Toolkit - Bootmgr repair. Thereafter upgraded to Windows 10.
I came across your videos a couple of weeks ago. I took your tips on how to deal with the 100% Disk problem and they worked great. I'm interested in using the two tools you mentioned in part one of this series. My question is: will those tools work effectively if the window search service is disabled? I disabled that service to lower my disk usage? I subscribed and I am still reviewing your older videos for helpful tips. You do a great job making these things seem simple which I know are not that simple.
Great in depth tutorial !! Just one question - does it work if the files on the USB are newer than the offline drive? So for example the unbootable system has Winbdows 21H2 but the downloaded ISO is windows 22H2 ?
Thanks for your videos. I did the reinstall windows many times. I'm downloading some of your videos onto my tablet so I can see watch the instruction incase I need it as there is no way I would remember them.
I have came to you for a vids at this point, each time knowledgeable and to the point so subscribed!
Thank you for this. Was trying to solve the BSOD that wasn't letting me get into windows and you saved me. Subscribed.
Keep this kind of thing coming!
I'm here because Windows 11 screwed up after an update restart. It's a shame that Microsoft does such a terrible job with its updates that its customers have to be terrified every time they get notifications to restart to install updates.
Same problem here
Did u fix it how plz I have same prob
@@aya.el1001 No, still an issue. I have done two subsequent update installations and my screen goes into a perpetual flashing state after the update - unusable. Then I had to uninstall the update only to have Windows bug me with a new message that my computer needs an update. So frustrating.
I swear!
Those updates are such a mess and whatever how many times you reschedule it to not do the updates one day u will find out the system did it by itself and then start the problems 💀…
I rarely comment but took this extra step to say this is a very useful video very nicely explained that helped solve my windows issue which wasn't booting, I am extremely thrilled and thankful and appreciate the knowledge sharing!
Thank you, Sir.
I learned a few new things from you
Thanks for the videos!! I think it would help if you started the video with a screenshot of the error message as to why it won't boot so you know which repair to try.
SFC fixes a lot of problems with Windows. It's not just fixing one specific error message. SFC should be at least tried with all error messages.
The tool scans Windows system files for corrupt files and replaces them with good ones if it finds any that have been corrupted.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge. As an autodidact, i love this straight to the point content ! 👌
Glad it helped.
@@CyberCPU if i dont have a USB cound i just connect my laptop to it to try to repair
So I am an IT guy since 30 years for quite a few companies, many hundreds of systems... and it is literally now over a decade i needed DISM or SFC or any other tool to restore Windows files. I am curious: what exactly do people do to ruin their Windows in a way that DISM would help? I mean as a normal user they can't overwrite anything, even as an admin you can't overwrite the system files, since you are not "TrustedInstaller". And if a Windows Update fails due to power outage or crash or anything while updating, NTFS will roll the changes back.
So what do people do nowadays since ~Windows Vista to be able to ruin Windows files at all? Really curious :)
Problem is even if you use it, it doesn't work. By the way do you know how you can make a backup of Windows 8.1 with the programs you have installed and their configurations?
I'm not sure how the Windows image gets corrupted. It could be numerous things. It could be a bad drive, a bad Windows update, or just Windows eating itself (corrupting its own files).
I typically spend the majority of my time figuring out how to fix it and spend very little time trying to figure out how it happened.
combination of unstable 'gamer brand' RAM and motherboards with onboard unstable 'gamer brand' chipsets
System messes up on its own over time. 🤷♀️
The user can even be some random USPS-mailman who never uses it for more than a minute a month to pay bills and then something silly like the navigation pane in explorer will just disappear permanently until SFC fixes it. Odd stuff like that.
TrustedInstaller is as inbred as a duke on an unstable system xD
@@Biaanca5036 How can an unstable RAM or mainboard mess up locked system files that have been written once at first install?
@@CyberCPU Fair enough... would be so interesting to me, how it happens. So if at one point you do find the time to see how it happened I would love to see a video about it - probably will help many as well :)...
Oh, man, I wish I had seen this video about a week ago. It would have saved me a reinstall of Windows.
Hi, great video I've used these tools before from others descriptions, but you explain it all way clearer.
Unfortunately no bueno for me... I have the same windows version, exactly the same dism version and all I get in dism is "error 87: the cleanup-image option is unknown". Sfc gives me: Windows Resource Protection could not start the repair service.
Can I do anything else to save this Windows 10?
Great work!Make the next video about bootmanager missing,ntldr missing etc
yes me too
Cool btw how did you capture the recovery mode since obs doesn't record when the PC is off
Capture card
Dism doesn't work in winRE. Error 800f0801.
Hey so far its a great video but for some reason I don't see that Install.esd file or install.win , I do see at the very bottom a files called install.swm and it's basically the biggest file in the sources folder. Could this maybe be it?
This video saved my life :) cheers mate!
Excellent again. Especially appreciate your listing the commands. This will save a lot of 'puters from defenestration.
Hi I've been having these issues on 2 computers i tried everything you've pointed out. I Had no issues going step by step but when i restart computer still doesn't boot into windows??? Ive tried everything and nothing seems to help i just get the recovery screen loop. What am i doing wrong?
Thank you for making educational content. I appreciate your work being straight to the key points and wording it all easy to understand.
Very useful! Thank for the effort.
The $64 question for me and the one I couldn't solve for almost a year and I hope you ir someone here has the knowledge regarding that.
The problem is my recovery cannot see any of my drives at all. Though Windows is running flawlessly. I do regular updates when they don't have problems.
The system is 4 years old the hardware is almost one year old .
13 Gen CPU with Z690 MB.
This is driving me crazy lol. If i took my NVMe and plugged it in my nephew's PC (6600x CPU and b560 MB), the recovery works perfectly.
One more thing is that I have to make my recovery drive visible otherwise I cannot even go to recovery environment which is weird.
Just got it fixed few days ago, It turned out you have to disable Intel Rapid Storage Technology in BIOS. Then recovery environment will see all your drives
I am having a problem with a windows update KB5025221not installing and it is keeping other updates from installing. I ran the Dism restorehealth command as per the previous video but got the following error DISM fails The source file could not be downloaded.
The license plate is funny, did you get any speeding tickets when you used it?
Hello, Something i did not understand about a directory about "temp" ? why you delete it and creat it and after execute the commande with scratch with temp directory ? between 7:23 and 8:01,
I forgot to delete the temp directory before filming the video and I wanted to show how to use the command to make a directory. Since the directory was already there, I showed how to remove it so that I could show how to create it.
@@CyberCPU Ok i understand, what does it mean scratchdir, it s need a temp file for resole the error message before, and you make a directory with md temp, and target it on the comand with scratch dir and no message error !!; is that information i did not had before, or maybe may english it s so bad and i did not understand id you said it on vidéo, sorry !
.
This procedure fixed my broken windows 10 computer. Thanks!!!!!
I tried both ways you showed but after 54.9% received a Error: 0x800f081f "The source files could not be found. Any ideas?
I’m having the same problem have you found a solution to this?
Nope.
awesome video - finally someone that can explain the basics of this function - that said any suggestions when a message pops up to say DISM does not support a Windows Vista or earlier operating system. Thing is I have a Windows 10 I am trying to fix that is from 2022 and the iso image is 2023/4. I followed everything you had shared getting all the drive letters correct. I have to recover my system offline using a recovery disk - woke up next day with my computer unable to boot. I use UEFI to boot and I checked the EFI boot files etc and that is all in order now.
same vista error
Something is wrong. I tried all your recommendations for DISM and it still says "the source files could not be found. Use the "source" option to specify the location of the files that are required to restore the feature." and then it specifies a Microsoft link. Confusing...
Yeah I get the same error. “The source files could not be found”.
This issue occurs because Microsoft's 'install.esd' file comes packaged with multiple versions of Windows (Home, Pro, etc.). When using the DISM command in the video, DISM fails as a result. It worked in the video because as he states @ 3:52 "...I'm not gonna do that because I've already created one for myself." It seems he created a Windows install USB in a different manner from in the video or he created one a long time ago before Microsoft started bundling multiple versions within a single .esd file.
We can fix this problem with a couple extra commands. For this entire demonstration, assume your Windows boot drive is C:, your Windows install USB is D:, and your scratch directory is 'C:\Temp'. Make sure to make modifications to any of these following commands if you're using alternate paths.
First we need to extract the correct Windows image from the 'install.esd' file. Type the following command into CMD:
DISM /Get-WimInfo /WimFile:D:\install.esd
This command will output the 'index' values for each version of Windows within the 'install.esd' file. Make note of the index value that correlates to your Windows version. As of the Windows 10 22H2 MCT .exe, Windows 10 Home is index 1 and Windows 10 Pro is index 6. For the rest of the demonstration, let's assume you're using Windows 10 Home so we shall use index 1.
Now that we have the index value of the Windows version we need, let's extract it. We can extract it to the flash drive or the boot drive. For this demonstration, let's extract to the boot drive.
DISM /Export-Image /SourceImageFile:D:\sources\install.esd /SourceIndex:1 /DestinationImageFile:C:\install.wim /Compress:Max /CheckIntegrity
This extracts the Windows 10 Home image file to the root of the boot drive (C:) as a '.wim' file. The '/SourceIndex:1' switch specifies the index for the Windows version, '1' is the index for Windows 10 Home; if you're not using Home (Pro, etc.) then change '1' in this switch to the correct index value that we retrieved earlier. The '/Compress:Max' switch compresses the '.wim' file to use less space but will take longer to do; if you don't mind using more space, you can use '/Compress:Fast' or '/Compress:None'.
Now we can actually fix the issue!
DISM /Image:C:\ /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth /Source:C:\install.wim /ScratchDir:C:\Temp
If you still get the error, check your syntax carefully and attempt the above command one more time (Hint: press the 'Up' arrow key on your keyboard to retrieve the last executed command). If you still get the error even after checking your syntax and trying again, attempt to re-export the 'install.esd' file using the '/Export-Image' command but this time use 'Compress:None'; this will take up far more space but may fix any compression/decompression errors that may have occurred.
This works for Windows 11 too! Hope this helps!
when i run the dism it says unable to access the image Error: 2
same here
Great videos!
But what if DISM doesn't run?
Error: 0x800f0801
"DISM failed. No operation performed." 😢
Help!!
Same here
This issue occurs because Microsoft's 'install.esd' file comes packaged with multiple versions of Windows (Home, Pro, etc.). When using the DISM command in the video, DISM fails as a result. It worked in the video because as he states @ 3:52 "I'm not gonna do that because I've already created one for myself." It seems he created a Windows install USB in a different manner from in the video or he created one a long time ago before Microsoft started bundling multiple versions within a single .esd file.
We can fix this problem with a couple extra commands. For this entire demonstration, assume your Windows boot drive is C:, your Windows install USB is D:, and your scratch directory is 'C:\Temp'. Make sure to make modifications to any of these following commands if you're using alternate paths.
First we need to extract the correct Windows image from the 'install.esd' file. Type the following command into CMD:
DISM /Get-WimInfo /WimFile:D:\install.esd
This command will output the 'index' values for each version of Windows within the 'install.esd' file. Make note of the index value that correlates to your Windows version. As of the Windows 10 22H2 MCT .exe, Windows 10 Home is index 1 and Windows 10 Pro is index 6. For the rest of the demonstration, let's assume you're using Windows 10 Home so we shall use index 1.
Now that we have the index value of the Windows version we need, let's extract it. We can extract it to the flash drive or the boot drive. For this demonstration, let's extract to the boot drive.
DISM /Export-Image /SourceImageFile:D:\sources\install.esd /SourceIndex:1 /DestinationImageFile:C:\install.wim /Compress:Max /CheckIntegrity
This extracts the Windows 10 Home image file to the root of the boot drive (C:) as a '.wim' file. The '/SourceIndex:1' switch specifies the index for the Windows version, '1' is the index for Windows 10 Home; if you're not using Home (Pro, etc.) then change '1' in this switch to the correct index value that we retrieved earlier. The '/Compress:Max' switch compresses the '.wim' file to use less space but will take longer to do; if you don't mind using more space, you can use '/Compress:Fast' or '/Compress:None'.
Now we can actually fix the issue!
DISM /Image:C:\ /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth /Source:C:\install.wim /ScratchDir:C:\Temp
If you still get the error, check your syntax carefully and attempt the above command one more time (Hint: press the 'Up' arrow key on your keyboard to retrieve the last executed command). If you still get the error even after checking your syntax and trying again, attempt to re-export the 'install.esd' file using the '/Export-Image' command but this time use 'Compress:None'; this will take up far more space but may fix any compression/decompression errors that may have occurred.
This works for Windows 11 too! Hope this helps!
Thank you for your answer but for me doesn't fix the problem :-( I have to extract image on myblaptop otherwise i gotcerrorcwith wim and/or esd
god damnit! i could´ve used this 2 or 3 years ago i think...some day i just absolutely couldnt get into my windows installation anymore....my brother is pretty good with computers, but i dont know if he tried to do what you did, or if he even found any tutorial for this kind of way to repair it...if this ever happens again, i´ll definetly try to use your video! great work!
Not finding boot drive.
c: drive shows up as usb drive and d: shows (the system cannot find the drive specified
Hi again, what I forgot to mention was the shortcuts that I spent so long to remember. And after a couple hours from posting a comment on here. I remembered. I got it and it takes less than 5mins to execute. But system restore points from an earlier date or time prior to the non-bootable Windows 10 OS. Is a must if you want to resolve this problem via system restore point. If anyone wants it. Let me know. Thank you
My system won’t boot and I ran the original dsm command without needing the scratch directory.
The scan worked and recovery was successful.
But my system still won’t boot into windows
Any idea this can be done win 11 as there's no install file
Amazing advice mate. Pssed I sent mine the india to get it up and running again. Come to think about it, never realised till now, 2 years have gone fast I wonder if they've managed to fix it for me. I didn't get a phone number from them. But what the hey!! They'll call me 😅😢😂
Never had to do this at all on Windows 7 and 8/8.1 as those OSes were super reliable and rarely needed repair but Windows 10 is a completely different story, in corporate environments we just wipe and load if the OS usually Windows 10 is corrupted. Alternatively the windows install USB does have another option called Refresh this PC which is less time consuming and does the same thing.
Excellent !!
I have a software suite that does all of this automatically but it's nice to know what's going on behind the scenes with each command.
What
Your content is great!
Thank you!
SUPER Helpful Tips. SUBSCRIBED
Thank you for this video. Unfortunately, I run into this error response when I try to run the DISM:
"Error 87
The /Image option that is specified points to a running Windows installation. To service the running operation system, use the /Online option"
What am I doing wrong?
You either typed it in wrong or, like me, used ventoy from a Linux machine to load the ISO, therefore no accessible cleanup files/image
I tried this method booting from an USB drive as you mentioned, but when I run DISM command, I always get this error: 0x800f081f. Any suggestions? Thanks in advance.
This issue occurs because Microsoft's 'install.esd' file comes packaged with multiple versions of Windows (Home, Pro, etc.). When using the DISM command in the video, DISM fails as a result. It worked in the video because as he states @ 3:52 "...I'm not gonna do that because I've already created one for myself." It seems he created a Windows install USB in a different manner from in the video or he created one a long time ago before Microsoft started bundling multiple versions within a single .esd file.
We can fix this problem with a couple extra commands. For this entire demonstration, assume your Windows boot drive is C:, your Windows install USB is D:, and your scratch directory is 'C:\Temp'. Make sure to make modifications to any of these following commands if you're using alternate paths.
First we need to extract the correct Windows image from the 'install.esd' file. Type the following command into CMD:
DISM /Get-WimInfo /WimFile:D:\install.esd
This command will output the 'index' values for each version of Windows within the 'install.esd' file. Make note of the index value that correlates to your Windows version. As of the Windows 10 22H2 MCT .exe, Windows 10 Home is index 1 and Windows 10 Pro is index 6. For the rest of the demonstration, let's assume you're using Windows 10 Home so we shall use index 1.
Now that we have the index value of the Windows version we need, let's extract it. We can extract it to the flash drive or the boot drive. For this demonstration, let's extract to the boot drive.
DISM /Export-Image /SourceImageFile:D:\sources\install.esd /SourceIndex:1 /DestinationImageFile:C:\install.wim /Compress:Max /CheckIntegrity
This extracts the Windows 10 Home image file to the root of the boot drive (C:) as a '.wim' file. The '/SourceIndex:1' switch specifies the index for the Windows version, '1' is the index for Windows 10 Home; if you're not using Home (Pro, etc.) then change '1' in this switch to the correct index value that we retrieved earlier. The '/Compress:Max' switch compresses the '.wim' file to use less space but will take longer to do; if you don't mind using more space, you can use '/Compress:Fast' or '/Compress:None'.
Now we can actually fix the issue!
DISM /Image:C:\ /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth /Source:C:\install.wim /ScratchDir:C:\Temp
If you still get the error, check your syntax carefully and attempt the above command one more time (Hint: press the 'Up' arrow key on your keyboard to retrieve the last executed command). If you still get the error even after checking your syntax and trying again, attempt to re-export the 'install.esd' file using the '/Export-Image' command but this time use 'Compress:None'; this will take up far more space but may fix any compression/decompression errors that may have occurred.
This works for Windows 11 too! Hope this helps!
Dism /get-wiminfo /wimfile:x: (usb letter) \install.esd doesnt works neither wth esd, neither with wim it says "error:2, can't file dthefile... Am I at a dead point? Or can i extract it with my notebook?just try on notebook and got samecerror 😔😔😔😔😔
Ok, I've extracted the install.wam I need and put it on an usb key with no compression. Still get the 0x800f081f "impossible find the source file" after it reached 100%.I'm pretty sure I have windows 11 Pro. Ihave the old old ol key that I used to install, I will try again with tat... The log is a poem, and it says I have corrupetpted files... But if dism is needed to repair them....
What if the issue is a corrupted registy, would this work to fix that as well?
No, unfortunately it won't.
@@CyberCPU is there any way to repair that without. Registry backup or do you have to reload windows at that point
@@aravitz857 I don't know of a way to repair a broken registry without just restoring a backup. That's why I recently did a video on how to reenable registry backup. The system that inspired that video had to be reloaded.
My Windows 10 won't start. Safe mode too. BSOD - CRITICAL PROCESS DIED. I try to use DISM but keep getting error 0x800f0801. Do you have an idea how to deal with it?
Same, looks like we are a lot with that problem related the source folder, but the url suggested aftercthecerrorcdoesn't take anywere... 😢
Didn’t fix mine
I think to myself what if Windows not booting? after watching your first video. today saw your 2nd vid :D thanks a lot for the answer. like to ask - do we need the exact version of Windows? i hv Windows 10 Pro on my usb, but most of my friends hv Home version. will it work?
Home/pro doesn't matter. All Windows install USBs will have home and Pro. The correct build of Windows would be a good idea. However, not all files change in every build, so a different build isn't a deal breaker. It might work still.
If i use dism i get this error 0x800f0801
This issue occurs because Microsoft's 'install.esd' file comes packaged with multiple versions of Windows (Home, Pro, etc.). When using the DISM command in the video, DISM fails as a result. It worked in the video because as he states @ 3:52 "...I'm not gonna do that because I've already created one for myself." It seems he created a Windows install USB in a different manner from in the video or he created one a long time ago before Microsoft started bundling multiple versions within a single .esd file.
We can fix this problem with a couple extra commands. For this entire demonstration, assume your Windows boot drive is C:, your Windows install USB is D:, and your scratch directory is 'C:\Temp'. Make sure to make modifications to any of these following commands if you're using alternate paths.
First we need to extract the correct Windows image from the 'install.esd' file. Type the following command into CMD:
DISM /Get-WimInfo /WimFile:D:\install.esd
This command will output the 'index' values for each version of Windows within the 'install.esd' file. Make note of the index value that correlates to your Windows version. As of the Windows 10 22H2 MCT .exe, Windows 10 Home is index 1 and Windows 10 Pro is index 6. For the rest of the demonstration, let's assume you're using Windows 10 Home so we shall use index 1.
Now that we have the index value of the Windows version we need, let's extract it. We can extract it to the flash drive or the boot drive. For this demonstration, let's extract to the boot drive.
DISM /Export-Image /SourceImageFile:D:\sources\install.esd /SourceIndex:1 /DestinationImageFile:C:\install.wim /Compress:Max /CheckIntegrity
This extracts the Windows 10 Home image file to the root of the boot drive (C:) as a '.wim' file. The '/SourceIndex:1' switch specifies the index for the Windows version, '1' is the index for Windows 10 Home; if you're not using Home (Pro, etc.) then change '1' in this switch to the correct index value that we retrieved earlier. The '/Compress:Max' switch compresses the '.wim' file to use less space but will take longer to do; if you don't mind using more space, you can use '/Compress:Fast' or '/Compress:None'.
Now we can actually fix the issue!
DISM /Image:C:\ /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth /Source:C:\install.wim /ScratchDir:C:\Temp
If you still get the error, check your syntax carefully and attempt the above command one more time (Hint: press the 'Up' arrow key on your keyboard to retrieve the last executed command). If you still get the error even after checking your syntax and trying again, attempt to re-export the 'install.esd' file using the '/Export-Image' command but this time use 'Compress:None'; this will take up far more space but may fix any compression/decompression errors that may have occurred.
This works for Windows 11 too! Hope this helps!
Error: 0x800f081f The source files could not be found. Help pleas
Ever found a fix. Same over here
I've been a tech for years and never knew how to properly use sfc
BTW I would use diskpart to list the disks to find out which drive is which or open regedit and export a key so you can get the dialog box that shows you drives...
Nicely done as usual
Thanks.
Thank you so much! Really appreciate in sharing your expertise! God bless you more.
So like the motherboard manufacture instructions or whatever are they supposed to be in the box? I bought my laptop like 5 years ago… i have no idea where that is… is there a place online where you can find that info?
Amazing video. Easy to follow.
Superb tutorial. Thank you!
For me it keeps throwing me an error saying that the source files can't be found even when specifying source should be on my USB drive. Sfc command did say it found some errors and fixed them but after booting my windows still starts to load meaning I see the loading circle going but then it just restarts. I even tried fixing the bcd but nothing seems to work. About five years worth of work, bookmarks, files etc down the drain I guess 😭
Same problem hre: sorce folder not specified (like I didn't wrote it) and a long link for info thatcactually doesn't exist.... 😢
Thank you very much.
If you're still reading these comments, what do you do if your Install file is "Install.swm", not .esd or .wim? Because often, the "Install.swm" is split into 2 or 3 files. What would the syntax be then?
Grwat video do you have the commad listed some where as when i pause the video youtube controls are in the way?
I'll put them in the description. Give me a few minutes. 😉
When I run dism it always returns Error: 0x800f0801. Dism Failed. No operation was performed. What now??
Thanks for giving me another repair tool in my toolbox.
Can you just change directories once again to c: Then run SFC?
Thanks Man! It worked like a charm!
The issue is there again. It has something to do with the nvidia drivers
Hi, how would I go about it if it tells me Error: 2
Unable to access image
Thank you for your help!
My last pc wouldn't have worked with this.
For some reason not only it doesn't boot, but it doesn't boot in recovery and if I put a bootable usb I get a broken screen and it never starts.
I had to physically swap the hard drive with another one with an OS installed on it for it to boot again, btw
And it still doesn't boot from usb, always broken screen. It boots from dvd tho.
Thankyou solved a windows 11 computer that kept coming up asking to repair I had to look at sfc scan now command solved it 👍 sfc from recovery
sfc /scannow /offbootdir={drive}\ /offwindir={drive}\windowsb
I had to do this just last week because I deleted a boot partition that was showing as an extra boot device in my Bios but only when the bios was in easy mode which was weird. In a program called "Easy EFUI" it was listed as hidden and I made sure it was the one I didn't need but when I deleted it bam my windows would no longer boot. I did not know about this video back then but when I made the recovery thumb drive and tried to do the start up repair as well as SFC and it failed and gave me an BSOD error that said could not fix disk or something and then gave some generic exception code. I eventually and I still don't really know how I did it used diskpart to rebuild the MBR I think, and even getting a few errors on the steps I followed from the internet, I somehow magically managed to get it fix lol. I think I did the same steps as in the video but in a different way?🤷♂ Anyhow I'm back up and running again and have once again learned never to mess with partitions at least not to delete any when I don't really know what I'm doing. I am glad though I did have enough primitive knowledge to at least fix it and the best part is the extra boot device no longer shows up in my bios as an option, was quite along day though. LOL
*Excellent!*
Wish you had this up earlier lol but fortunately I had a full clone backup of my laptop so was able to restore my laptop from that once I remember I had it... 4hrs later lol ugh...
It didn't work. 😢
1. Is this process called "imaging" when IT technicians say they have to re-image the machine?
2. Do I have to back-up my personal files and data before running these tools? Does it affect my personal files and data in the same partition?
What do I do if it says can’t fix it 12:16
Most of my windows boot problems were hardware issues… like rams and HDDs but unfortunately i had to go through all the software diagnostics and possible fixes before realizing it was damaged hardware..
i think windows is developing a habit of destroying your memory with every release…. I have a drawer in my office full of pc and laptop RAMs
also my humble advice for anyone using hdds .. clone your boot drive once every month or two onto an ssd or a spare drive ..
What if i had 0x800f081f error? It is like bootrec didn't see .esd file at all.
I have the same problem, I had to extract the image on another computer, but still gave me thata errro after 100% "no source file found". Unfortunateli looks likeca lot ofvus has this problem, but after 4 months this video was abandoned. I guest ppl has just a few apps on their pc lately an prefer to reset clean. Someone does eveything by phone, doesn't even know what a command line is. I', m 40, but I remember ms-dos...
@@brunobellucci275 yeah, i can't imagine reinstalling all that stuff i had on my PC. Even when i change my mobo i have clone every disk to new ssd 1:1. My windows current installation is 6 years old, but some programs wich i clone from old HDD's are like 10 years. And they still running on the third system already...
I have tons of customizations, software and other, it will take a life to restore! I used to work with it, I'm using the pc of the office and notebook, but they have 1/50 of the software I have in my pc. And dropboc and other backup cloud software will recognize the pc as new one and I will have Tera to rebackup....
Hey Yo!
Per your video "Water Cooling a mid-range Graphics Card"
It's too late, I spent $589 on an ASUS RTX3060 Ti.
It works great, but when I'm streaming/gaming it gets 82c and I am thinking maybe an extra $200 for a kit would serve me well; taking off 30c temp.
Lession I learned: The future of gaming needs more than 8GB VRAM. I'm Resigned to 1080p/ultra, but I think I can add value by by stabilizing my RTX temps.
What do you think?
I would've posted on your other video, but comments were limited 😂
I run most games on my 3060 at 3440x1440 to match my ultra wide.
I'm very happy with the water block. It was definitely worth it. However, it's hard to find water blocks for mid-range GPUs. Most manufacturers don't make them.
Not sure what you mean by comments being limited.
@@CyberCPU I've never water cooled my system before, and I wonder if it would be a weird change.
What happens if I forget to turn my pump on, or I forget to top off my water reservoir? Wouldn't that spell disaster for the expensive GPU?
Kinda scary for me to think about ;)
It wouldn't let me post a comment on your other video for whatever reason. 🤷♂️
Anyway, thanks for your response 💯
@@DaKloneLiving That's weird that it wouldn't let you comment on the other video. I'm not sure why.
When you water-cool a system the pump and everything comes on with the power button just like your air cooler. If done properly with high quality parts it should be fine. It takes a LONG time for water to evaporate from the reservoir. My main system was flushed and topped off well over a year ago and I haven't touched it. It runs every day. No problems.
“How to fix windows that isn’t booting”
Step 1: boot into windows
So I tried doing this after my PC stopped recognizing the boot drive after a failed Windows update, but Windows just stays in the load screen with the blue window and spinning dots forever when I try to boot with the USB connected and won't even get to the "Repair your computer" screen. Does that mean the drive is totally corrupt and dead?
I do not want to repair my internal HD but and external HD that I have connected using SATA-USB cable to another USB port. That possible? I should then refer to that external HD in each of the commands you enter?
I can’t get any of the recovery stuff to work at all. Everytime I lose power my computer refused to load windows. I’ve tried every fix available online and none of it works. I’ve reformatted the drive, and done a fresh install about 5 times but everytime I try and restart it gets stuck on the motherboard loading screen. I’ve tried several hard drives, moved the hard drive to a separate pc and it worked ok but refuses to work on my pc.
My question is can I fix my boot from my backup hard drive so that my main drive can be fixed by the win. 10 repair disk in my CD? My main hard drive is stuck on the "choose your keyboard layout" it goes right to this screen and my keyboard and mouse are dead. I cannot access anything. My F keys do not work nor my Del, or Esc. so I cannot get in to bios even at start up. I can however unplug the main hard drive, boot up with my backup drive and at least get to the windows install/repair which will allow me to get to the CMD screen. is there a way to change my boot order so my main drive can access the install/fix CD?
What can I do if there is no cursor on the screen after inserting the USB stick with the Windows mediacreationtool into the defective Windows laptop? Do you have any advice?
I get The restore operation failed. Either the repair source was not found or the component store cannot be repaired. "version 10.0.19041.3570"
i got this message: there is system repair pending which requires reboot to complete, restart windows and run sfc again, when i restart the min windows logo shows i get blue screen of death 😢
Dism spits out this error: 0x800f081f the source files could not be found. This happens even when I use /source and point to the install.esd on my USB drive. What do I do now?
Love your vids so so helpful. You got anything on how to reset my log in pin.. besides using Microsoft log ID password that requires a verification text that I cant get on my iPhone.. why? .. no clue but I don't get them anymore and cant log back into this OS that I fixed with your HELP !
I'm still getting an error *The source files could not be found" even after I specify the /source on the usb drive. Is it too corrupt to fix?
uhhh question what do i do if theres no continue button?