

Remember to look for paths of corrupt drivers at the bottom of the log.īut I faced a problem, that I could not delete the file because it was owned by the system. Now all I did was to go to system32\driverstore and find the folder in which the cursed WD drivers were kept, and delete the folder permanently.įor others, the driver could have a name like PeePoo.ini or something you can always google that stuff to see which company makes those drivers.

For me it was a driver from a folder named "system32\driverstore\ WDSCAMxAMD64\wdscam.ini" or something like that. Go to the bottom of the log file to see which driver forced the installation to fail. Now it would be a big-**bleep** log file which you need to open up (it took around 1 minute to open completely). Then you have to go to "$Windows.~BT\Sources\Panther" and you have to find a file named "setupact.log" They are a bit difficult to access, but you can do it.įirst, you need to go to folder options of Windows explorer and allow windows to show hidden files and system files. Now, the question arises how I came to know which driver to delete? I searched online for a few days to find that I can learn about it in the Windows logs. In my case it was the driver for Western Digital Passport external hard drive driver. I have found the Solution for Windows 11 installation failed error 0x80070002 -0x20007 !!! It is basically a problem of driver failing to install itself on Windows 11.
