Unless you are under warranty it will cost money. Looks like a hardware problem, otherwise recovery CDs wouldn't fail. You can use Linux distros for this too. Well I know this is a little late but the same AVG file loaded for me and the system halted. I ended up getting a Ghost 15 boot disc and saw the partition type was incorrect 17 instead of 07 which is installable NTFS. I backed up the partition table before that but it only took 15 minutes to fix. Before I even got the option to boot safe mode I needed to do a system start up repair with the windows disc.
Tough to say if my clone jacked up the partition table or if windows worked on more than the boot configuration bootcfg or bcdedit tools. Follow the steps given in the Download link. Now check whether u have access to drives i;e C and D drive on your computer , If you don't have access to the drives then hard drive is corrupted and cannot be restored.
If you can access the drives then backup all the data in those drives and install the Ubuntu by complete formatting of the disk. If installation of ubuntu doesn't work then try to recover your system using recovery CD which are available.
If all the 3 options doesn't work then its hard drive failure consider replacing your hard drive. Sign up to join this community. The best answers are voted up and rise to the top. Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group. Create a free Team What is Teams? Learn more. Windows 7 boot hangs at logo Ask Question. Asked 9 years, 2 months ago.
Active 6 years, 10 months ago. Viewed 13k times. Improve this question. You had viruses? Then the official support response is to flatten the machine and start over. Thanks, but as I stated in my post I am unable to boot to anything Windows-related, including a repair disc or an install disc. Previous Next. Well, I have had a similiar problem to this before. My solution was in command prompt was in Notepad type notepad in cmd and nagivate to the drive Windows is installed then open the Windows folder, then system32 then drivers then remove everything just in that folder that starts with "avg" and ends in ".
How satisfied are you with this reply? Thanks for your feedback, it helps us improve the site. In reply to dmssargent's post on January 17, Thankyou for the response, so after removing all the files this should allow my computer to boot in safe mode?
And then uninstall it through that? In reply to Evanm14's post on January 17, It should, I have had the problem 3 times before I uninstalled AVG and replaced toprevent the issue from occuring again because those specific drivers are AVG's and not critical to boot at all. In reply to dmssargent's post on January 18, After deleting them I ran safe mode and it froze at classpnp.
I tried renaming the file to classpnp. Any ideas? In reply to Evanm14's post on January 18, Gerry C J Cornell. I would run an anti-virus scan. Do you have an external enclosure? What is your computer make and model? In reply to dmssargent's post on February 7, If it works, the could show the name of driver that stalls the booting process and the log is availble in WinRE which I believe the user has access too.
In the command prompt window, run bootrec. This should be helpful. Or you can also do like this: Insert the Windows installation CD. Then it will load drivers and the screen should pop up to go on installing Windows.
Click that option and it should fix the problem. If you have made full system backups in daily usage, things will become very easy. You can restore the system to a time when it works. Step 1. Start Windows 7 normally. Before you see the Windows loading logo, press F8 on your keyboard. Then you can see a variety of Advanced Boot Options. Step 2. Choose Repair Your Computer and wait until Windows 7 repair mode is ready.
Step 3. If you are told to choose keyboard, just click OK. If you are told to choose an account, choose your account, and click OK. If you have set password for your Windows account, enter the password too. Then you can see System Recovery Options. Step 5. Here you can see all Windows restore points available. Try your best to recall when your computer is safe and sound, and choose the corresponding restore point. If you do not see the full restore points, check Show more restore points.
Step 6. Click Next. It will try restoring your Windows to the restore point you have selected. This will take some time before the system restore is done. Hope this helps. Turn on your computer, and before you see the Windows loading logo, rapidly press F8 key on your keyboard.
Choose Repair Your Computer and wait until Windows 7 repair mode is started. If it asks you to choose a keyboard, just click OK. If it tells you to choose an account, choose your account, and click OK. If you do have password for your Windows account, you need to enter it too.
Choose Command Prompt , this will run Windows command prompt. This will scan your hard drive for errors, and will try to fix the errors if it detects any. This process can take some time so please wait until the disk check is done.
However, if the same situation happens, this means there is a certain issue for the hard drive.
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