SSD mbr woes

Derrick_20

Prominent
Mar 7, 2017
1
0
510
so i was getting alot of bsod,so i decided to find the culprit seemed to be heat issues from cpu,i suppose my fan was dying so i replaced and a applied some new thermal paste while at it,when i tried to boot up my ssd was blue screening before windows even booted,so now im on my hdd and can view and access files on my ssd but cannot load even safe mode or win repair on the ssd. whats my easiest solution? copy data reinstall windows and merge folders?

Samsung magician SS
https://postimg.org/image/hl0tizwkt/
mini-tool SS
https://postimg.org/image/ocr8lulkd/
 
Solution
So because you were getting "a lot of bsod" you somehow decided the cause was a defective CPU (heatsink) fan (I suppose that's what you meant when you stated "my fan was dying").

What evidence was there that the fan was "dying"? Did the system overheat and shutdown?

Did you check a BIOS setting re the temperatures generated by your PC system?

Assuming you're working with a Intel CPU did you check out its health with the Intel Processor Diagnostic Tool during the times the system booted to the SSD?

Just because a system projects a BSOD during the bootup process it does not mean there's a problem with the CPU. As a matter of fact it would be HIGHLY unlikely that it IS a problem with the CPU.

Unless you have evidence to the contrary...
So because you were getting "a lot of bsod" you somehow decided the cause was a defective CPU (heatsink) fan (I suppose that's what you meant when you stated "my fan was dying").

What evidence was there that the fan was "dying"? Did the system overheat and shutdown?

Did you check a BIOS setting re the temperatures generated by your PC system?

Assuming you're working with a Intel CPU did you check out its health with the Intel Processor Diagnostic Tool during the times the system booted to the SSD?

Just because a system projects a BSOD during the bootup process it does not mean there's a problem with the CPU. As a matter of fact it would be HIGHLY unlikely that it IS a problem with the CPU.

Unless you have evidence to the contrary there's no plausible reason to think your processor is the "culprit". And it is NOT a sensible approach as an initial troubleshooting step for resolving the problem from that point-of-view that involves removing & replacing the heat sink (assuming that's what you did).

From your description of the problem you're experiencing it's practically impossible to determine its cause since so many factors may be at play. Since you're dealing with a non-defective SSD would it be practical (and not too terribly onerous) for you to simply perform a fresh-install of the OS (Win 10?) and utilize your HDD as a secondary drive to transfer data & install programs on the SSD? Of course, check your HDD for malware/viruses before copying/moving any data/programs over to the SSD.
 
Solution