Why wont Boot disk restore won’t fix corrupted profile?
Why wont Boot disk restore won’t fix corrupted Windows 10 profile? I’ve restored two full backups and several incremental backups going back one month. Started having problems main admin account: explorer windows won’t refresh automatically say when I create a folder I have to refresh window to see the new folder. Eventually system bogs down and hangs. When I sign out I get messages such as application G is preventing you from signing out. When I select sign out anyway, system hangs at sign out (or restarting) screen. Event viewer offers no clues about where to locate applicaton G. Symptoms indicate corrupt profile (my son’s account on same pc is unaffected, as is any new account I create. I’d think that a full OS disk restore would put my profile back the way it was before I had any problems. I scan for malware frequently with Windows Defender and Malwarebytes. Any ideas? Thanks.


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En réponse à David, welcome to these User… par truwrikodrorow…

Thanks very much for your fast response. I’ve done all of my recoveries after restart. Profile seems ok at first but quickly acts up. I’m going to try disconnecting external drives and temporarily disabling my second internal drive in case something’s lurking there. It may be due to windows automatic update plus other auto updating software which I can prevent temporarily by turning off wifi. The problem started a week ago and I’ve restored from archives as far back as three weeks before that with the same result - both full disk and partition, restoring mbr and disk signature eqch time.
I made a new admin profile and copied my files but it’s hard setting up software eg sonar, etc the way they were before. I have to locate the license info, etc. I’m bewildered because for many years when things get fouled up I’ve always been able to restore from an archive without problems.
Thanks
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David, I can only suggest the normal things to do here:
Run SFC /SCANNOW to check the integrity of your OS files & programs etc.
Run CHKDSK /R to check for any file system issues on the OS drive.
Trying running a Windows Memory diagnostic to ensure you don't have a failing memory module.
Check the Windows event logs for any evidence of any serious errors being logged.
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When I had roughly similar problems, it turned out to be a problem with one of my disks. The system just kept going into trances, and eventually would get tied into knots. Fortunately for me, I had a mirrored system; so I could disconnect one drive at a time and experiment.
If you don't have that luxury, at least check to see if your drive activity light is acting strange: always on, on for a minute then off for a few seconds, and that sort of thing.
Believe it or not, I had a roughly similar problem that turned out to be a problem with Firefox. It seemed improbable, but I noticed that Firefox was throwing errors. I uninstalled it, ad the problem went away.
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En réponse à When I had roughly similar… par truwrikodrorow…

Thank you both for helping me out. I’ve tried sfc and chkdisk. I’ll check event viewer again but although I see errors, Windows doesn’t tell me which software is causing them - many have event names without a publisher I can connect to particular software. I may have to find a utility with easier to read results.
I experimented and found that the profile is fine until I connect to the internet. At least I isolated one thing. Even with Windows updates paused it occurs. So maybe I can find a utility to tell me what software updates the moment I connect.
So, Acronis is working fine - doing what it should do. I shouldn’t waste more of your time. I can always use the new profile if I can’t hunt down the issue. I appreciate you guys helping out a stranger in need! I may follow up later with a solution to help anyone in the future having the same problem. Have a good one.
Dave
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Dave, one last thought, consider doing an offline antivirus scan of your computer using such as the AVG Rescue CD (which can be created as a CD or a USB stick - 2GB or larger). I tend to keep this on a USB stick that I boot from occasionally and update the virus definitions before using it in anger where strange behaviour might suggest possible malware.
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Not sure if this will help but have a look at the Windows 8, 8.1 and 10 Fix in this LINK
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Thanks for the tips. I spent a few more days stuggling with it but no joy. As soon as any program connected to the web, profile screwed up and wouldn’t let me sign out. As a hail mary pass I downoaded the first profile copy utilty Google showed ne: Forensit. And it was free! And it worked. OMG. I had to enter a few email passwords, set some default apps, and activate Sonar, but quite painless. :)
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Dave, glad to read that you have a solution to this strange issue - thanks for sharing about the Forensit utility (have bookmarked the site!).
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