Hi Frickfrock99--
You can easily see what the BSOD stop error is by setting for it to freeze
on screen before restart.
Help Troubleshoot the Blue Screen of Death by Preventing Automatic Reboot :: the How-To Geek
I'd try these steps in this order, whatever the BSOD says, provided you've
checked to make sure your hardware is not the cause of the problems. Make
sure inside your box all connections are tight, and your video and sound
cards and memory are seated correctly.
If you don't have a Vista DVD from MSFT (I'm not talking about an OEM
recovery DVD or partition which will put you at default if it works with
nothing saved):
Download Vista Repair Disk
Windows Vista Recovery Disc Download — The NeoSmart Files
1) First try 3 options from Startup Repair. If you have a Vista DVD then
restart with it in the drive>press any key to boot from it and run Startup
Repair. From Startup Repair you have 3 good tools with an excellent chance
of fixing your system. If you don't have a Vista DVD from which to boot to
Startup Repair, no problem, Download the .iso from the link below and
burn it, and you'll have the Microsoft Vista Repair Disk with Startup
Repair.
Download Vista Repair Disk
Windows Vista Recovery Disc Download — The NeoSmart Files
How to Use Startup Repair from the Vista DVD or the Repair Disk you make:
Using System Restore from the Vista Windows Recovery Environment Startup Repair: frequently asked questions - Windows Vista Help
2) If Startup Repair does not get your Vista back, then use the 3 bootrec
commands from the command prompt available on the Statup Repair Menu:
The menu I refer to is in this set of directions with a grey background.
Windows Vista Home Premium - Repair StartUp
Those are:
bootrec /fixmbr
bootrec /fixboot
bootrec /rebuild BCD
3) If my second option doesn't work, then try System restore from the
Startup Repair list.
4) If by rare chance you have an actual Vista DVD, you can put it in, boot
from it>choose the Upgrade Option>choose your current broken Vista Drive and
try to do a repair install with the Vista DVD.
How To Perform a Repair Installation For Vista
Repair Install For Vista
5) If the above 3 tools don't work, then use the 4 tools available by
restarting your pc and tapping F8 once per second to get to the Windows
Advanced Options Menu.
From this menu click on 3 Safe Mode links to use System Restore. Make sure
you try all 3 if one doesn't work, because just one of them may work.
Tap F8 to Reach Windows Advanced Options Menu Pictured Below:
Vista windows advanced options menu image by indyank on Photobucket
Safe Mode
Safe Mode with Networking
Safe Mode with Command: At the prompt you would type the command to use
forsystem restore at the safe mode cmd prompt is:
%systemroot%\system32\restore\rstrui.exe
If these 3 tools don't work, you have one more you can try which is Last
Known Good Configuration.
Good luck,
CH[/quote]
Ok so i made my repair disk, and put it in.
The first thing i did was see if there were any startup problems, so i hit startup repair, and it said there were no problems.
So i decided to go to system restore, and set it to the earliest time i could.
I began restoring, then a BSOD appeared with a NTFS.sys error, and 0x0000008e (0xc0000005, 0x80ce752B, 0x8d973b64, 0x00000000,
Now i cant even start my computer normally, as the startup repair window keeps popping up as it says windows cannot start, even when i hit cancel it still pops up on the restart.
Whenever i try to just let it fix what it says, it gives me a blue screen, most recently it said
PFN_list_corrupt