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Automatic Repair Couldn’t Repair Your PC FIX (Boot Loop Solved in BIOS)

674 views· 6 likes· 2:06· Nov 15, 2025

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Automatic Repair Couldn’t Repair Your PC FIX (Boot Loop Solved in BIOS) My PC was stuck on “Preparing Automatic Repair → Diagnosing Your PC → Automatic Repair couldn’t repair your PC”. The fix was simple… my BIOS was trying to boot from the wrong drive. In this video I show how to open BIOS, select the correct Windows Boot Manager, and disable the extra boot options. If your PC is stuck in an automatic repair loop, this should help you boot normally again. If you’re still getting the error, comment your BIOS screen and I’ll help. If this helps, hit that like button and subscribe for more easy tech fixes! 🙌 For Business Enquiries Email: babinmeitei@gmail.com ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Support the channel and help keep the content coming! Your contribution is greatly appreciated. Follow the link to donate via PayPal 💰 💰Support the Channel: https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/Babinmeitei ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ✅ BEST HOME COMPUTER DESK : https://amzn.to/3wW83UH ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ✄✄✄✄✄✄✄✄✄✄✄✄✄✄✄✄✄✄ The links above are affiliate links, where I earn a small commission if you click on the link and purchase an item If you are planning to buy then Please do use my Link that will help this channel.

About This Video

In this video, I’m fixing that super annoying boot loop where your PC keeps going: “Preparing Automatic Repair → Diagnosing your PC → Automatic Repair couldn’t repair your PC.” You get stuck with just two options—Advanced options or Shutdown—and honestly at that moment I was like, bro, I just want my PC back. A lot of people jump straight into recovery tools, but on desktop PCs those options don’t always help because you usually don’t have a built-in recovery drive like many laptops do. Most of the time on a desktop, this happens because your BIOS boot settings are wrong. Windows is installed on one drive, but your motherboard is trying to boot from another drive or a random partition (or even USB). I show you exactly how I fixed it: power off completely, turn on and spam your BIOS key (Delete for me, yours could be F2/F10/F1), then go to the Boot tab and set Boot Option #1 to the correct Windows Boot Manager. In my case it was “Windows Boot Manager (WD Green).” After that, I disabled the extra boot options so the system stops jumping around, hit F10 to save and exit, and my PC booted normally again—no blue screen, no diagnosing, no repair loop.

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