Look forward to the post back. Best of luck!
Well, after a night full of cloning experiments that makes me feel like Dr. Franknfurter when he's a not-so-sweet cross-dressing fool in a nightie, I was surprised to find that the errors remained in the system even after being cloned over to a new hard drive, which may possibly point to there being two problems: First being that there may or may not really be a hard drive bad sector issue, and the other being that my system folders may well be corrupted to hell, perhaps as the result of Startup Repair trying to recover data from bad sectors but not succeeding.
Regardless, I did find some more information which may possible be helpful. The first being that I remembered that when I last ran Spybot-S&D, it has just had an update, which led to the creation of a registry back up by Spybot, in the event that it hosed my regs, which is stored as regLocal.reg and regUsers.reg, and they cover the registry keys for the Local Machine and Users, respectively. According to most people over on the Spybot forums, while it is a weird method to restore it, it is apparently possible to double click these files, have Windows take over and just insert them into your registry file. However, I'm currently not sure exactly how this should be accomplished via the command prompt that I can access from WindowsRE. Do you know of any way to help? My current thought process is that, being that these backups were made incredibly recently prior to the crash, they should be mostly, if not all, good and current. Thus, even if my regback folder had been corrupted, if the error lies in either one of these, I can get it resolved that way.
Conversely, my other train of thought is, now that I've got two identical cloned disks, assuming that the error isn't with the registry, since even the possibly corrupted regback restore led to some improvement, is there a way that I can do a install over one of them, then simply use either the command prompt or installation disk to copy over just the system files to the other? In essence, making one of them into an organ donor for the other? If need be, I can possibly start with just one folder (e.g. Drivers, maybe?), then move my way down the line. Would that work at all? After all, isn't that what a repair install does, to just replace the system files, but not others? I know this is one hell of a suggestion, but maybe I can do it manually from the clone donor?
Just as a starting point, is there a way one can get a hold of the logs generated when Windows boots up in Safe Mode? If so, I can possibly check out exactly what needs to be replaced, since when I try to boot in any of the Safe Modes, the list of files and drivers does load, it just hits a wall suddenly somewhere down the line. If we can see that log, we can possibly know where to start.