B
B
Bogdan121341412020-02-16 19:37:34
laptops
Bogdan12134141, 2020-02-16 19:37:34

How can I exit the bios?

Briefly speaking. I was sitting playing a game on my laptop (X540Y Asus, no floppy drive). The laptop then abruptly shuts down. I thought I was exhausted. I plug the laptop into an outlet and turn it on. After a couple of seconds, I look at the BIOS menu (Asus Bios Utility Ez MODE was written on the top left, there was nothing in Boot priority) In short, I pressed f10 and the computer rebooted and bios again. I do not know what to do. To be honest, the fact that I can't get out of the BIOS scares me. Please, help!!!!

Answer the question

In order to leave comments, you need to log in

2 answer(s)
S
SagePtr, 2020-02-16
@SagePtr

The hard drive is covered, judging by the symptoms and its absence in the boot priority list.

V
Viktor, 2020-02-16
@nehrung

Well, since you called me, I will answer how I myself would begin to solve such a problem.
First of all, is there a repair/recovery bootable LiveUSB flash drive nearby? It would be nice to find it, it will greatly facilitate subsequent work. A LiveDVD repair disc is also suitable, but then you need to get a drive on a USB tail for it. Connect, find a new device in the BIOS in the Boot priority list, and start from it. After starting the Windows PE repair operating system, you can do some repair actions, and first of all, look at the built-in HDD through the usual Explorer. If the contents of the disk are observed (read and written) and look as usual, then we conclude that the bootloader has crashed. To restore it, you need to run the BootICE utility or another similar one (they usually are on repair disks).
If the disk is not visible in Explorer, then the second one starts: with the help of test utilities (and especially Victoria) you need to figure out what happened to the disk. If the file system or partition layout has fallen off, then this can also be restored using special. utilities. If this did not work out, then at the very least you can try to pull out user data with something like the Recuva program. But this is without a guarantee of success.

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Ask your question

Ask a Question

731 491 924 answers to any question