Unable to cancel restore
OS: Windows 10
Acronis: 2016, not sure exatcly which version because I cannot get into Windows.
I need to restore one of my machines. However, my backup files are on a disk that is not available when Windows is not running. So when I try to perform a restore, the machine reboots and boots back up using the Acronis Loader. However it then says that my .TIB file is not available, which is to be expected - please see the attacehd image.
However, the message then gives me the following options:
- Retry - this doesn't help, the same error occurs, obviously.
- Ignore - this causes the machine to reboot back into Acronis Loader and the same problem happens.
- Cancel - this also causes the machine to reboot back into Acronis Loader and the same problem happens.
What I want to do is boot back into Windows, move my backup to a disk that is accesible from Acronis Loader and then restart the restore. But I can't get back into WIndows, only the Acronis Loader.
Can anyone help me get back to Windows, please?
Anhang | Größe |
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Justin,
Do you have your Acronis oflfine recovery media? If so, typically, if you can boot that once, it will straighten things out so you can get back into windows. You can download this as an .iso and burn it to CD or DVD from another computer if you didn't create this previously. I highly recommend you get familiar with the recovery media and only perform a full disk recovery or any clone option with it. This will avoid situations this.
Alternatively, if you have a Windows installer disc, boot to it and run a "startup repair" which should get it back into Windows when it's dorne. If you don't have one of those either, you can use another computer to download the Windows media creation tool (google it - it's from Microsoft) to make a bootable UsB, or DVD installer for Windows 10. You can then use that to run the startup repair as well.
And, if you have an F8 safemode option on your machine, that might be another way to get things back to normal - not all computers have this though - Dell's typically do and some other OEM's, but not a lot of home built computer motherboards seem to.
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