Solved Win7 Can't Boot or Safe Boot any disk/part due to STOP 0x0000007B

Thenin

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I can no longer boot 64-bit Win 7 Pro in normal or Safe Mode on one computer due to BSOD: STOP 0x0000007B (0XFFFF880009A97E8, 0XFFFFFFFFC0000034, 0, 0).

But there is additional, extremely important info: I have two separate month-old backup boot partitions, and they won't boot either for exactly the same reason! One is on a second partition of the main SSD (my regular boot partition is on the first partition), and the other is on a regular hard disk. Therefore, it's extremely unlikely that this is a disk drive or partition problem.

The last thing I did was use AutoRuns to disable some unwanted startups my startup manager (Chameleon Startup Manager) didn't see and thus couldn't disable. However, as I said above, I have two separate month-old backup boot partitions, and I made no changes whatsoever to these, so surely one or the other should boot fine, but I get the same BSOD on all boot partitions!

What I've done so far:

- Ran Startup Repair 6 times total. Each time it reports that it could not repair the problem.

- Tried system restore. It reported every restore attempt failed.

- Booted up with LSoft Active @ Boot Disk, latest version (15.x). Then I ran Check Disk on all disks and partitions, and no problems were reported anywhere. Then I examined all the disks and partitions, and the reports said everything is perfect: all partitions were of the right type, and the integrity of all disks were ideal. Then I ran it's MemTest for 8 hours with no problems.

- Confirmed the BCD store for all disks were setup correctly.

- Disconnected various hard disks and tested via trial and error if this helped. It never did.

- I've confirmed I have the latest BIOS installed.


Note that this BSOD occurs so early in the boot process that it does not produce any dump files, so I can't post them.

Note also that the system booted perfectly immediately prior to the AutoRuns changes to the main boot partition, so the odds are ridiculously low that this is any kind of hardware-related problem. At the same time, the odds are ridiculously low that a software problem is the cause given that the other two backup boot partitions won't boot either and give the same BSODs when I try to boot them. It would thus seem that if there is such a low probability of either a hardware or software problem, then my system should at least boot one of the backups, but it won't! I'm baffled!

What can I try next?
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 7 Professional 64-bitIntel Core i7-4790K Devil’s Canyon Quad-Core ...16GB G.SKILL TridentX 2666 (PC3 21300) RAMEVGA nVidia GTX-750
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home-built
OS
Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
CPU
Intel Core i7-4790K Devil’s Canyon Quad-Core 4.0 GHz
Motherboard
ASUS Z97-A/USB 3.1 Gen 2
Memory
16GB G.SKILL TridentX 2666 (PC3 21300) RAM
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA nVidia GTX-750
Sound Card
LogiLink USB 2.0 7.1 Channel Sound Box
Monitor(s) Displays
DELL U2713HM, ViewSonic 22, HDTV
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
System is on 2x RAID 0 Samsung 850 PRO 256GB SATA-III SSD

System has several other SATA III disks as well
PSU
Corsair RM750x
Case
CoolerMaster Storm Scout 2
Cooling
CoolerMaster Hyper 212 EVO
Keyboard
Apple Slim, Bluetooth slim
Mouse
Logitech Trackball Marble & Logitech Wireless Trackball
Internet Speed
100 Gbps
Antivirus
Avira AntiVirus Pro
Browser
Waterfox, Opera, Basilisk

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 10 Pro x64 ; Xubuntu x64Intel i7 860 @ 2.80 GHz O/C'ed to 4.0GHz16GB Corsair Vengance DDR3 @ 661 MHz Dual Cha...EVGA NVidia GTX 560 1024MB
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Golden Mk. I.4
OS
Windows 10 Pro x64 ; Xubuntu x64
CPU
Intel i7 860 @ 2.80 GHz O/C'ed to 4.0GHz
Motherboard
Gigabyte P55A-UD3R Rev.1. Award BIOS F13
Memory
16GB Corsair Vengance DDR3 @ 661 MHz Dual Channel (9-9-9-24)
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA NVidia GTX 560 1024MB
Sound Card
Realtek Integrated
Monitor(s) Displays
Dual Samsung SyncMaster 2494HS
Screen Resolution
1920*1080 and 1920*1080
Hard Drives
1*Samsung 840 EVO 120GB SSD;
1*OCZ Vertex 2 60GB SSD;
2*Samsung F3 SpinPoint 1TB in RAID0;
1*Samsung F1 SpinPoint 1TB;
2*Western Digital 1TB External USB 3.0
1*Western Digital 500GB External USB 3.0
1*Seagate 500GB External USB 2.0
PSU
Thermaltake ToughPower QFan 750W
Case
Thermaltake Element S VK60001W2Z
Cooling
Corsair H60 Water Cooling, 2*230mm and 2*80mm case fans
Keyboard
Logitech G110
Mouse
Logitech MX518
0x7B's are often caused by physical disk failure. Remove the disk and install it into another computer. Now use SeaTools for DOS to check the drive. Unfortunately that is the only option available.

http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/313457-seatools-dos-windows-how-use.html

Thank you for your reply, Golden, but I get the exact same 0x7B BSOD on EVERY disk - Seven of them so far, some internal SATA 3's and some External USB 3's, so it can't even be a bad disk or even a bad disk controller!

This one's a real stumper! Anything else I could examine?
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 7 Professional 64-bitIntel Core i7-4790K Devil’s Canyon Quad-Core ...16GB G.SKILL TridentX 2666 (PC3 21300) RAMEVGA nVidia GTX-750
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home-built
OS
Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
CPU
Intel Core i7-4790K Devil’s Canyon Quad-Core 4.0 GHz
Motherboard
ASUS Z97-A/USB 3.1 Gen 2
Memory
16GB G.SKILL TridentX 2666 (PC3 21300) RAM
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA nVidia GTX-750
Sound Card
LogiLink USB 2.0 7.1 Channel Sound Box
Monitor(s) Displays
DELL U2713HM, ViewSonic 22, HDTV
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
System is on 2x RAID 0 Samsung 850 PRO 256GB SATA-III SSD

System has several other SATA III disks as well
PSU
Corsair RM750x
Case
CoolerMaster Storm Scout 2
Cooling
CoolerMaster Hyper 212 EVO
Keyboard
Apple Slim, Bluetooth slim
Mouse
Logitech Trackball Marble & Logitech Wireless Trackball
Internet Speed
100 Gbps
Antivirus
Avira AntiVirus Pro
Browser
Waterfox, Opera, Basilisk
Weird suggestion: PSU. I've fixed boot issues on one of my PCs this way before now. Identified it by hot-plugging USB devices. Are there any internal/external power-drawing components you could do without to reduce demand?
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 7 Professional x648GbSapphire 6850
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
ASUS
OS
Windows 7 Professional x64
Motherboard
M4A89TD PRO/USB3
Memory
8Gb
Graphics Card(s)
Sapphire 6850
Hard Drives
Corsair Neutron 64Gb
Seagate 500Gb
Antivirus
AVG
Browser
IE11
Weird suggestion: PSU. I've fixed boot issues on one of my PCs this way before now. Identified it by hot-plugging USB devices. Are there any internal/external power-drawing components you could do without to reduce demand?

Thanks, r44712! I definitely like weird suggestions, especially for such a weird problem! ;)

This was a weird problem, but I solved it differently, which I'll describe below...
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 7 Professional 64-bitIntel Core i7-4790K Devil’s Canyon Quad-Core ...16GB G.SKILL TridentX 2666 (PC3 21300) RAMEVGA nVidia GTX-750
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home-built
OS
Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
CPU
Intel Core i7-4790K Devil’s Canyon Quad-Core 4.0 GHz
Motherboard
ASUS Z97-A/USB 3.1 Gen 2
Memory
16GB G.SKILL TridentX 2666 (PC3 21300) RAM
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA nVidia GTX-750
Sound Card
LogiLink USB 2.0 7.1 Channel Sound Box
Monitor(s) Displays
DELL U2713HM, ViewSonic 22, HDTV
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
System is on 2x RAID 0 Samsung 850 PRO 256GB SATA-III SSD

System has several other SATA III disks as well
PSU
Corsair RM750x
Case
CoolerMaster Storm Scout 2
Cooling
CoolerMaster Hyper 212 EVO
Keyboard
Apple Slim, Bluetooth slim
Mouse
Logitech Trackball Marble & Logitech Wireless Trackball
Internet Speed
100 Gbps
Antivirus
Avira AntiVirus Pro
Browser
Waterfox, Opera, Basilisk
Problem solved, and as I kept insisting, there was NO disk or other hardware problem! Also, the BSOD 0x7B was pretty much incidental and irrelevant, so I wish this thread had stayed where it was...

Since I was desperate and wasn't getting any help that actually addressed the actual problem, I started changing BIOS settings pretty much by random trial and error. When I changed the "Secure Boot" setting from "Windows (efi?)" to "Other OS", all my boot partitions suddenly started booting perfectly again!

So the BSOD was irrelevant and merely hinted that some particularly obscure setting might be amiss and there was no hardware problem of any kind.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 7 Professional 64-bitIntel Core i7-4790K Devil’s Canyon Quad-Core ...16GB G.SKILL TridentX 2666 (PC3 21300) RAMEVGA nVidia GTX-750
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home-built
OS
Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
CPU
Intel Core i7-4790K Devil’s Canyon Quad-Core 4.0 GHz
Motherboard
ASUS Z97-A/USB 3.1 Gen 2
Memory
16GB G.SKILL TridentX 2666 (PC3 21300) RAM
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA nVidia GTX-750
Sound Card
LogiLink USB 2.0 7.1 Channel Sound Box
Monitor(s) Displays
DELL U2713HM, ViewSonic 22, HDTV
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
System is on 2x RAID 0 Samsung 850 PRO 256GB SATA-III SSD

System has several other SATA III disks as well
PSU
Corsair RM750x
Case
CoolerMaster Storm Scout 2
Cooling
CoolerMaster Hyper 212 EVO
Keyboard
Apple Slim, Bluetooth slim
Mouse
Logitech Trackball Marble & Logitech Wireless Trackball
Internet Speed
100 Gbps
Antivirus
Avira AntiVirus Pro
Browser
Waterfox, Opera, Basilisk
Problem solved, and as I kept insisting, there was NO disk or other hardware problem! Also, the BSOD 0x7B was pretty much incidental and irrelevant, so I wish this thread had stayed where it was...

Since I was desperate and wasn't getting any help that actually addressed the actual problem, I started changing BIOS settings pretty much by random trial and error. When I changed the "Secure Boot" setting from "Windows (efi?)" to "Other OS", all my boot partitions suddenly started booting perfectly again!

So the BSOD was irrelevant and merely hinted that some particularly obscure setting might be amiss and there was no hardware problem of any kind.

COOL, What a way for a problem to get solved.:D:D:D:D:D
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 7 Ultimate x64asus m4a78lt-m le4gb ram, 500gb HDDati radeon 3000(in built)
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
custom build
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
asus m4a78lt-m le
Motherboard
asus
Memory
4gb ram, 500gb HDD
Graphics Card(s)
ati radeon 3000(in built)
Screen Resolution
1366x768
Antivirus
avast
Browser
chrome
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