Hi Garett,
Yes — this is
very likely fixable, and the
most likely problem is the install media, not the soldered RAM.
Your
HP OmniBook X 16 is an
Arm-based Snapdragon X laptop, and Microsoft says the
Windows Media Creation Tool does not currently create Arm64 bootable media. For these systems, you need either
official Windows 11 Arm64 media or
HP recovery media. Microsoft also notes that
Snapdragon X Series devices can boot generic Arm64 Windows media, but some device functions may not fully work until Windows Update pulls the remaining drivers after setup. (
learn.microsoft.com)
HP’s boot documentation also says that on consumer notebooks you should use
Esc for Startup Menu,
F9 for Boot Device Options, and
F10 for BIOS Setup. HP also shows that
USB is normally part of the UEFI boot order, so if your USB never appears, the usual causes are
wrong media,
USB boot disabled, or
Secure Boot rejecting that stick. (
support.hp.com)
What I would do next
1. Do not wipe the original SSD
If you still have the old drive, keep it untouched for now.
That gives you:
- A fallback if the new SSD or install media is the problem.
- A way to make recovery media from the original system if needed.
- A way to confirm the laptop itself is still healthy.
2. Create the correct USB
On another Windows PC:
- Download the official Windows 11 Arm64 ISO from Microsoft’s Windows 11 for Arm-based PCs page.
- Do not use Media Creation Tool for this machine.
- Use Rufus to write the ISO to a 16 GB+ USB flash drive.
- Choose GPT / UEFI when Rufus asks.
Microsoft explicitly says Arm64 ISOs can be used to create bootable USB media, and also says Media Creation Tool does
not currently support making Arm64 boot media. (
learn.microsoft.com)
3. Boot the HP from that USB
- Power the laptop fully off.
- Insert the new USB.
- Power on and immediately tap
Esc repeatedly.
- When the Startup Menu appears, press
F9 for Boot Device Options.
- Select the USB device if it appears.
If the USB still does
not appear:
- Press
Esc, then F10 for BIOS.
- Go to Boot Options.
- Make sure USB Boot is enabled.
- Check that UEFI boot order includes USB.
- Save and try again.
If it still is not detected, I would try:
- A different USB flash drive.
- A different USB port or adapter.
- Temporarily disabling Secure Boot just long enough to test the USB, then turning it back on afterward.
HP’s docs confirm those startup keys and that USB is part of the normal UEFI boot path. (
support.hp.com)
4. Do a clean install onto the 4 TB SSD
Once Windows Setup starts:
- Choose Custom: Install Windows only.
- On the drive selection screen, delete every partition on the new 4 TB SSD.
- Select the unallocated space.
- Let Windows create the partitions automatically.
- Continue setup.
This is better than trying to reuse mismatched partitions from a failed clone.
5. After setup, get drivers loaded
Microsoft says Snapdragon X systems can install from generic Arm64 media, but won’t necessarily have
full functionality until the rest of the drivers are installed from
Windows Update. If Wi‑Fi is missing at first, use a
USB Ethernet adapter or dock if you have one. (
learn.microsoft.com)
Important warning about the USB you already ordered
If the “Windows 11 Pro USB” you bought is a normal retail/x64 installer, it may
not be the right media for this laptop. For your HP, it needs to be
Arm64 or model-specific
HP recovery media. If the listing does
not clearly say
Arm or
Arm64, I would assume it is the wrong one. Microsoft has a separate Arm download path for these systems. (
microsoft.com)
If it still BSODs after using proper Arm64 media
Then I’d check these in order:
- Put the original SSD back in and see whether the laptop boots normally.
- If the old SSD works, the issue is likely:
- bad install media,
- bad/new SSD incompatibility,
- or partitioning/setup corruption.
- If the old SSD also fails, then we look at:
- BIOS/firmware issue,
- hardware problem,
- or a damaged connector/SSD seating issue.
Please reply with these 3 details
- Does your OmniBook boot normally again if you reinstall the original SSD?
- What is the exact BSOD stop code on the blue screen?
- Did you make the USB with x64 Windows 11 or Arm64 Windows 11?
If you want, I can give you a
10-minute exact Rufus + BIOS walkthrough for this HP so you can try it before the new USB even arrives.