BSOD after everything

evilwubwub

Prominent
May 23, 2017
1
0
510
Just moved across the country. Secured my PC in the moving truck, but maybe not enough. Went to start up my PC and got a BSOD after the windows logo. No new hardware, software, updates, or drivers. I have tried so many things to fix this but nothing seems to work.
What I have tried:
Startup repair - fails every time
Problem signature:
Problem Event Name: StartupRepairOffline
Problem Signature 1 & 2: 6.1.7600.16385
Problem Signature 3: unknown
Problem Signature 4: 21199653
Problem Signature 5: AutoFailover
Problem Signature 6: 16
Problem Signature 7: BadPatch

System restore to earlier point - fails for all 3 points it has. Runs through the whole process but says that it was not completed successfully
Windows Memory Diagnostic: Says nothing is wrong
Command Prompt: Tried many different things including
Chkdsk /f (says 0 corrupted files but 63 reparse files)
sfc /scannow (everything I got a message saying that something was pending and to restart the system so the first time I restarted it straight from the installation disk, got the same message so the second time I tried to boot from last good configuration which led to a blue screen which led to a restart to disk and I got the same message again.)
I tried sfc /scannow /offbootdir=c:\ /offwindir=c:\windows\ (said it didn't have the same architecture)
Essentially, the command prompt says that I do not have the "boot" file anymore.

Removed cmos battery, unplugged everything and help power button to flush electricity out of system: didn't work
Tried removing the RAM systematically to see if anything was broken, that didn't work
Tried booting with just the hard drive that contains the OS and not the other hard drive, that didn't work
I've switched out and around new SATA cables from the hard drives to the mobo
Blue screen:
Stop: 0x000000F4

I honestly don't know what else to try. This has been many many hours of work and searching the internet. I really really do not want to reformat as I have important docs and I know that I should have backed them up when I had the chance. Thank you for your help!
My system:
CPU: Intel Core i5-3570K Ivy Bridge Quad-Core 3.4GHz (3.8GHz Turbo) LGA 1155 77W BX80637I53570K
Motherboard: GIGABYTE GA-Z77X-UD3H LGA 1155 Intel Z77 HDMI SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 ATX
RAM: CORSAIR Vengeance 16GB (4 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1600 (PC3 12800)
GPU: EVGA SuperClocked 02G-P4-2662-KR G-SYNC Support GeForce GTX 660 2GB 192-bit GDDR5
HDD:Western Digital WD RE4 WD5003ABYX 500GB 7200 RPM 64MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb/s 3.5"
The second one is some hitachi I don't really know what it is but it's 500MB and does not have my OS on it.
OS: Windows 7 32-bit
 
Solution
Hello... Basically there are a lot of very small electrical connections between the GPU and MB... and also the read heads on a HD, can sit/park on top of the DATA platters... during transport they will be subjected to vibrations and g's of force... my test might determine if you have a GPU connection problem or a OS drive/file/boot problem. B /
Hello... as a "simple test" set your BIO's for the CPU/IGT... and set some memory for it... save and exit.

de-power/un-plug the PS.... and remove your Video card... connect to your MB video output to monitor, and plug in power supply.

See if Windows will complete a boot for you B /
 
Hello... Basically there are a lot of very small electrical connections between the GPU and MB... and also the read heads on a HD, can sit/park on top of the DATA platters... during transport they will be subjected to vibrations and g's of force... my test might determine if you have a GPU connection problem or a OS drive/file/boot problem. B /
 
Solution