
Once you sure its right disk, type Clean and press enter Please be certain that you are erasing the correct disk. Warning: Diskpart Erase/Clean will permanently erase/destroy all data on the selected drive. If Disk 1 is the drive you want to clear, type select 1) and press enter. This will show the list of drives currently attached to PC, make note of the drive number of the drive you want to wipe Under advanced startup, click restart now

Go to settings/update & security/recovery Make sure 120gb ssd isn't added to boot orderĮasiest way to wipe 120gb drive is using diskpart/clean Once win 10 boots fine, reattach the drives. I would remove 120gb ssd + other drives while you install win 10 on 480gb one Note: I can see the failure codes for the updates in the "Settings" window, just no dmp file:įeature update to Windows 10, version 18-06OOB (3) I have this feeling that the Windows update is failing because there isn't enough free space on my current 120GB OS SSD, but who knows without the memory dump file, it might be a driver incompatability.Īny thoughts or advice would be much appreciated! Is it possible for me to install a new, clean 480GB SSD into my PC, install the latest version of Windows 10 onto it, format my old, 120GB OS SSD and migrate my 2 HDD's to the new system? This should leave me with a brand new SSD with a fully up-to-date version of Windows 10 on it with 3 attached storage drives. dmp files, however I have another idea that I'd like to ask if it might work:


Unfortunately I can't for the life of me find the. Not sure why it took me so long to write to this forum for help but I've finally had enough of Windows installing updates, telling me to restart every hour then when it finally does restart it BSOD's after ~30% with one of 2 errors:
