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Windows 10 repair reverts 1607 back to 1511

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jonjof:
Apologies if this has been answered already, but I do not find a reference.
After I ran a repair on Windows 10 anniversary version, the installation was reverted back to version 1511.
Is there any solution to repair back to 1607?
Without running the anniversary  update again, which was most likely the initial cause of a networking adapter problem.

Boggin:
I can't see how that could have happened.

You could use Option 5 in the repair program to restore the registry, but what networking problem did you have after the AU ?

jonjof:
Many thanks for the reply.

Most likely the anniversary update did not complete.
What happened was there were no networking connection options listed after the attempted update.
So networking was not possible at all.

Under Device amanger the LAN Intel ethernet card shows as being present and installed and up to date and working.

I went through many troubleshooting repairs most included in these articles, and nothing worked.

http://www.askvg.com/fix-one-or-more-network-protocols-are-missing-on-this-computer-error-in-windows/
http://www.askvg.com/fix-network-connections-folder-is-empty-in-windows-not-showing-network-adapters-list/

The tweak repair DID restore the adapter.

But what also happened after teh repair is that there were numerous unidentified files on my desktop, and when I tried removing them, the installation froze, and I resorted to restoring via an image I had saved prior to the update.

I have updated a large number of Windows 10 computers from version 1511 to 1607, and most of them updated fine.
But 3 of my computers ended up with the missing network adapters!

I do not have any virtual networking options listed in these articles such as Cisco on this client or any of the others 2 that had this problem.

Perhaps you had some experience with this already?

Jonathan J

Boggin:
Are you updating using a Win 10 install disk ?

Was it the actual AU that caused the network problem or the subsequent updates that followed the AU ?

I've done a number of repair installs on one of my Win 7 to 10 laptops and I opt for not to look for updates.

The current Win 10 ISO AFAIK still only takes you to 1607 14393.0 and its the subsequent updates that take you to 14393.576 although there is now an optional one that will get you to .577 should you have these problems - https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/3213522

Not sure if the elevated cmd netcfg -v -winpe would do anything for you if netcfg -d didn't.

You can see what the netcfg cmds can do by opening a cmd prompt and entering netcfg /?

In Settings/Network & Internet there is a Network reset option, but netcgf -d already does that.

jonjof:

I am using the ISO which is dated around June 2016 and I run the setup directly from my hard drive after downloading the ISO.

Interesting, I had not noticed the recent cumulative update relates to maybe a simlar issue as you point out.
I suspect these Virtualization issues reported on the recent KB 3213522 are probably not related to what I am seeing on the primary upgrade.

Interesting also, I never saw this issue on any of my computers on the first upgrade I did mostly from Windows 7 to Windows 10. 

No further updates could be done as networking is immediately cut off after the windows restart.
But when I get a chance I wil try running this most recent update on the third computer, as I have not corrected  this issue yet on that one!
Will also first try the command netcfg -v -winpe! 

Thanks for the interest and info.

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