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I've found that the only way to dual boot reliably is to have windows installed on a separate, dedicated drive, and to keep all drives used by Linux air-gapped from the windows drive. Fast start and hibernate must also be disabled within windows to prevent it from putting hardware in an undefined state.
That being said, I haven't actually found any regular use for the windows install in years. mostly just keep it around as a sort of backup failsafe, or just in case there is a game that refuses to work in Linux. 99 times out of 100 it simply just collects dust.
I kept Windows "just in case" because it had some sort of fake activated MS Office which I would lose access to if I uninstalled Windows, along with iTunes. I also used an exam website that claimed it wouldn't work on anything but Windows & Chrome and Mac users would somehow always have problems so I couldn't take the risk. Guess what, it is just fine on Firefox. (right next to a Windows VM, y'know, just in case) Now I see I could have chosen clean install in the installer and live on.