I'm sorry. Is this a request for me to do this or is this a question? If it is a question, then both of the options I mentioned do not actually boot into windows. It boots into an entirely separate, very very small, operating system that has many of the command line utilities that Windows has available to it. You can run chkdsk from this environment in any way you could run it from regular windows environment. HOWEVER, if you build a Windows Pre-installation environment using the Windows adk, it VERY, VERY important to use the same version of the adk that corresponds to the version of the Windows you have installed (there are multiple adks for windows 10). So you do not need "administrator rights" when running the command prompt sing either method mentioned above: all it is is a blank background and a single command prompt. When you exit the command prompt, the computer restarts. I hope this answered your question.