By default, Microsoft allows users for ten days to uninstall a new Windows 10 feature update and revert to an earlier version of the operating system.
In this article, we'll show you how to increase your “up timeinstallationoperating system" to give you more time to try out some new Windows 10 feature update.
After installing a new Windows 10 feature update, it's not uncommon to experience errors, performance issues, or themecompatibility issues that require the release update to be uninstalled until the bugs are fixed.
To go back to a previous version of Windows 10, users can go to the Recovery Settings screen in the Start> Settings> Update & Security> Recovery . From there, you can go back to the previous version by clicking the "Start" button in the section "Back to the previous version of Windows 10."
If more than ten days have passed since its installation updating capabilities In Windows 10, the reset button will be turned off, as shown below, and you will not be able to remove the update.
For those who want more time to uninstall a new version, you can use the Deployment Image Servicing and Management command line tool (DISM.exe).
How to extend uninstall time for updates functions
As mentioned earlier, after installing a new feature update, Microsoft sets the operating system uninstall window to ten days. This is the time you need to uninstall the new update.
From an upgraded command prompt (run cmd as Administrator), you can request the value of the uninstall window setting using the following DISM command:
To open cmd as an administrator, search for cmd and right-click on the black icon that appears - open as administrator.
DISM / Online / Get-OSUninstallWindow
As you can see below, after installing a new feature update, the setting “Uninstall Windows” is set to the default of ten days.
To extend the number of days you can do this with DISM with / Set-OSUninstallWindow as follows:
DISM / Online / Set-OSUninstallWindow / Value: [days]
The number of days you specify can be from 2 to 60 days. If you specify a number smaller than 2 or greater than 60, the setting will use the default uninstall limit of 10 days.
For example, if you want to configure Windows Uninstall Windows in 59 days, use the following command:
DISM / Online / Set-OSUninstallWindow / Value: 59
For most, this setting provides ample time to decide if you want to use a newer version of Windows 10.