Good afternoon. I just got a call from a potential customer who has a Dell Optiplex 3050 that is set up as an imaging server. They had a power surge and it took out the power supply. They replaced the power supply and now it asks for a Bitlocker key. They have no clue what the key is and neither does the company that set it up. I told her where to look in her Microsoft account and the key is nowhere to be found. Since it is the original drive in the original computer is there any way to get the computer to recognize the Bitlocker key? Any other suggestions?Thanks.
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Because it’s the same original drive in the same Dell OptiPlex 3050, the most likely issue is that the power surge or PSU replacement changed/reset TPM or BIOS settings, which triggered BitLocker recovery.
BitLocker usually relies on the motherboard’s TPM chip, not just the drive itself. If the TPM state changed, Windows will ask for the 48-digit recovery key.
The best thing to try first is:
If BIOS settings were reset, restoring them may allow it to boot normally.
If the key is not in the customer’s Microsoft account, check whether the machine was set up under:
For a business imaging server, the recovery key is often stored there instead of a personal Microsoft account.
If the surge damaged the motherboard or TPM, there is no bypass without the recovery key. At that point the options are to recover the key from backups / IT records or wipe and rebuild the server.