KMODE Exception not handled windows 10 on MacBook Air

Hello to all,


I just bought my MacBook Air 13.3 with i7 8GB 256GB and I tried to install Windows 10 Pro 64-bit using boot camp. I downloaded the .iso from MSDN, checked if the .iso is corrupted and used USB 3.0 Memory Stick. I created a 120GB partition for the bootcamp,then restarted, inserted the Windows License Key and right up in the installation screen (where it says "Copying Files"), before it would make any progress, I receive a Blue Screen of Death error saying KMODE Exception not handled. Does anybody know if there is any issue with Windows 10 Pro, or even MacBook Air about that ?


Thank you all for your time.


MacBook Air (13-inch, Early 2015), OS X Yosemite (10.10.5), Windows 10 Pro 64-bit

MacBook Air (13-inch, Early 2015), OS X Yosemite (10.10.5), Windows 10 Pro 64-bit

Posted on Sep 17, 2015 1:03 AM

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25 replies

Sep 17, 2015 2:50 AM in response to Loner T

Hi Loner T and thank you for answering.


I saw the above thread but even with a clean install (did again the whole process) it did not work. If it is a driver issue, can you provide me some more info on which drivers do I need ? What is more, when I made the effort to install Windows 10, I had a Bluetooth Sculp Comfort Mouse connected. Do you think it might affected the procedure ?


Thanks

Sep 17, 2015 3:57 AM in response to Loner T

Yes, but I don't see how a USB2 drive will make a difference, though I will try it. About the .iso, it is an iso marked as Windows 10 x64 (Multiple Editions). Now I am downloading the retail iso from Microsoft, do you think that the MSDN iso could have a problem (drivers, signing etc).


PS Sorry for asking too much, but it is my first MacBook and I have many questions 🙂

Sep 20, 2015 5:52 AM in response to Loner T

No, I did not as I only have a USB 3.0 drive. I will try to buy a new one tomorrow. Can you describe me the EFI Boot method ?n


Also, I don't see any issues with my Mac, as it works like it should and even run Windows 10 on parallel. Should I not worry if this is a hardware issue, also BSOD can harm the Mac's hardware ?


Sorry for the noob questions 🙂

Sep 20, 2015 5:57 AM in response to dmavrotas

In the EFI Method, you do not use BCA, create a Free Space partition using Disk Utility. This free space gets split into MSR (System reserved) and MSD (Data=NTFS) when you directly boot from the W10 installer. This method is faster than the traditional method, which inserts a BIOS-emulation layer between Windows and the Mac HW/Firmware.


Parallels creates its own emulation of BIOS, so it is not an accurate reference. BSODs do not harm a Mac or a PC. Extreme heat is much worse than BSODs.

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KMODE Exception not handled windows 10 on MacBook Air

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