I reset the BIOS. I reset the CMOS. I replaced the CMOS. No IDE option in my bios. Thing gets stuck on automatic repair - ill leave it on for hours and nothing.

I removed all additional HDDs and SSDs. I pulled the C drive and backed up the important data. Pulled the GPU and checked it real good. All of the ram as well.

I had gotten a BSOD with the “PNP Driver Watchdog” error. Google is unhelpful as anyone with this BSOD never received nor confirmed a working remedy or solution.

Now, after days of trying I am very rarely able to get to the Windows Install window from my USB. But none of my mice or keyboards work. They’ll work briefly for a few seconds and then stop. Nothing works to get them going again forcing me to shut down yet again.

Only thing I can think of is an unplanned and unannounced power shut off while I was out. Less than a week later my PC is pulling this shit. Refusing to boot.

Im ready to take it to a stupid pc repair shop… which im very hesitant on doing as I built this thing. Not to mention I dont like the thought of transporting this huge and heavy thing.

  • teft@piefed.social
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    9 hours ago

    Download memtest86+ to a thumbdrive, boot from the thumbdrive and run the tests.

    If you can’t get that to boot then either the memory is fucked or your mobo is fucked.

    Do you have a friend with a similar set up pc you could test parts in? That way you can narrow down what part is causing the issue.

    Edit: also you say it won’t boot but that is the recovery screen in your screenshot. Have you tried just booting into safe mode using F8?

    • Evil_Shrubbery@thelemmy.club
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      3 hours ago

      We have been giving them this simple advice about memtest86 for 10 days now (they have several posts regarding this issue, you can look it up), they just disregard it.

      (That and live-booting any OS from USB just for diagnostics, to see if the issues are there, maybe stress test it.)

      It seems like an issue a bit complex to diagnose, but with some structure you can always rule out things until you get to the core issue, and then try to fix that or replace it.