![asus tf101 reset to factory asus tf101 reset to factory](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/6fH1rKAvrTc/hqdefault.jpg)
- ASUS TF101 RESET TO FACTORY HOW TO
- ASUS TF101 RESET TO FACTORY INSTALL
- ASUS TF101 RESET TO FACTORY FULL
![asus tf101 reset to factory asus tf101 reset to factory](https://www.tabletpc.news/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/1547965207_maxresdefault.jpg)
As soon as I got it I remember I combined those 2 partitions into one. Out of the box for some reason Asus chose to break the 256GB NVMe drive into 2 partitions. I did manipulate the partitions without ill effects on my G752VY. But most just put it on a partition as that's the easiest thing to do in mass production. A thumb drive with the image on it would be nice, as that is relatively cheap.
ASUS TF101 RESET TO FACTORY HOW TO
I want to reformat the thing with a brand new OS but cant figure out how to get into it to do this. I remember the old days where you used to get media with the factory image on those, Media is simply not big enough anymore a lot of the time. Reformatting an Asus TF101 That Wont Boot My friend just gave me a TF101 that only boots to the Asus logo and then freezes (well the glimmer continues but it doesnt move past that). Its kind of a PITA but so many OEMs have now switched to live recovery's only where its only available on the drive it was sent with. So do I need to buy a recovery partition or are there any other ways to recover it to factory state?
ASUS TF101 RESET TO FACTORY INSTALL
Having the original drive uncompromised also saves time in the RMA process for other problems as only the original equipment and OS are supported.Ī couple months ago I clean install windows 10 and accidentally deleted the recovery partition, so whenever I Factory reset my G752 it took me to a blue screen with some options, similar to the picture below. Once you have cloned you can mess around all you want, you have an insurance policy that you pulled and put away. This way you aill always have the original image for the aw crap moments and can recover without having to send your machine off and paying to have it done, usually costs more in shipping and labor charges than the new drive and certainly saves in future down time.
![asus tf101 reset to factory asus tf101 reset to factory](https://s3.manualzz.com/store/data/059634108_1-9c0bc3c8d5d5ba5954ebb74a5aea5a5a.png)
My advice is and has always been and will always be.įirst thing after getting a new machine clone your original drive to a new drive then pull the original and put it away for a rainy day, much like the OP is having now. For laptops its a different story and they are never the same again after a dirty install. On desktops its a different story as thats how you started anyhow.
ASUS TF101 RESET TO FACTORY FULL
The forum is full of posts just like this one. Its no secret here that I do not support the incessant urge to reinstall the OS from scratch. That where put you back to out of the box state with recovery partition intact. If you ditched the original install and chose to do a dirty install then the only way back to factory state is to ship the machine back to ASUS for reimaging. Join Date Nov 2013 Reputation 144 Posts 3,854 Phanteks Enthoo Elite 8X LL120 PWM, 3X LL140 PWM, 12 SP120 PWM 1x AF140 PWM HeatKiller IV PRO and VRM blocks ,Dual D5 PWM serial, 2X 480, 1X 360 RADS Samsung 850 EVO 1TB X2 in RAID 0, 960 PRO 1TB DIMM.2_1 Array JustinThyme PC Specs JustinThyme PC SpecsĦ4GB DDR4 8x8 Corsair Dominator Platinum 3800 MHz C17Įxternal Audioengine D1 24 bit 192kbps DAC