If you notice that when the operating system boots up immediately before the "Welcome" screen appears, the hard disk check program is launched, this could be caused by minor damage to the boot part of the registry or some kind of hard disk malfunction. If you know that there are no options to replace or repair your current hard drive, then you can disable the automatic launch of the utility.
Necessary
Regedit Registry Editor
Instructions
Step 1
In order to solve this problem, you need to turn to the registry editor - the Regedit program. It is worth remembering that editing the registry is unsafe, so back up your registry files first. To start the program, click the "Start" menu - "Run" - type Regedit and click "OK".
Step 2
In the editor window that opens, find the [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE / System / CurrentControlSet / ControlSession / Manager] folder. There is a BootExecute parameter in this folder. The default BootExecute value has one form - autocheck autochk *. If this parameter has a different value, replace it with the default value (autocheck autochk *).
Step 3
Click OK. Close the registry editor and reboot the system.
Step 4
When editing the registry values does not help, the reason may lie in the disk, which is marked with a "dirty" bit, and it is not deleted after checking. You can check the status of a dirty bit with the Fsutil command.
Step 5
To do this, launch the command execution window, as described above in the example with the registry editor. Enter the command Fsutil dirty query Y (Y: hard drive letter). You will see a message about "dirty" disk.
Step 6
Use the Chkntfs command to uncheck the disk on subsequent system reboots. The syntax for this command is as follows: Chkntfs / x Y: (Y: is the letter of the hard drive). You will see a message about the used NTFS system.
Step 7
After closing all windows, reboot your system. Before the welcome screen appears, the disk check program will run. It will give out that "dirty" beat, but it will no longer bother you.