If your computer also includes a recovery partition, you can copy it to the recovery drive, which you can then use to reset your computer to the default factory settings. Additionally, after copying the recovery partition, you’ll get the option to delete it from your hard drive to free up some space. In this guide, you’ll learn the easy steps to create and use a Windows 10 recovery drive to troubleshoot, fix, and reinstall the operating system as necessary.
How to create a recovery drive on Windows 10 How to use a Windows 10 recovery drive to fix your PC
How to create a recovery drive on Windows 10
To create a Windows 10 recovery drive, do the following: Once the process completes, you’ll be prompted whether you want to delete the recovery partition. If you have more than enough available space, you can leave it. However, if you have a device which is low on storage, you can delete it to save several gigabytes. Recovery Drive – Back up system files option Recovery Drive – Select USB drive Recovery Drive – Create USB drive step If you’re creating a recovery partition for a Surface device, you can safely delete the partition. In the future, you can download the recovery image from Microsoft support or even without a recovery image.
How to use a Windows 10 recovery drive to fix your PC
Windows 10 comes with many recovery options built-in, which means that most of the time you won’t need to use the recovery drive. The operating system is smart enough to detect when it’s unable to boot and at the third time it fails to start, it’ll automatically boot into its Advanced startup options, which you can use to troubleshoot and repair virtually any issue on your PC. However, there will be times when your device is so broken that won’t even boot into recovery mode. In this case, you’ll connect the USB recovery drive you created into your PC to start in recovery mode.
Advanced startup options
After starting your PC with the USB recovery drive, you’ll get into the Advanced startup options, which you can use to troubleshoot and fix your computer. In the advanced options, you can use a number of recovery options. For example, you can use a restore point to go back to a time where your computer worked correctly. You can use recovery using system recovery image that you might have previously created. You can also select the Startup Repair to let Windows 10 automatically fix any problem. In addition, there is an option Command Prompt, which you can use to manually troubleshoot and fix the issue, you can change the startup settings, or go back to a previous version of Windows 10 (if available). If nothing works, outside the Advanced options, there “Reset this PC” option, which allows you to reinstall Windows 10 with the option to keep your files, settings, and apps or you can choose to do clean install of Windows 10 by removing everything. All content on this site is provided with no warranties, express or implied. Use any information at your own risk. Always backup of your device and files before making any changes. Privacy policy info.