Matricks - Thank you for your interest but you obliviously need to learn more about the Windows SYS-Prep Option before commenting.
I suppose
What is Sysprep (technet.microsoft.com) is a suitable place to "learn more about Sysprep", as you suggest. I found some interesting quotes:
The System Preparation (Sysprep) tool prepares an installation of Windows for duplication, auditing, and customer delivery.
Which of these are you trying to accomplish?
Sysprep must be used only to configure new installations of Windows.
You said you wanted to "transfer your Personal Windows OS and Apps to other HardWare" [sic]. A personalized Windows installation with personal apps is not a new installation.
On to what I think you are referring to:
You can run Sysprep as many times as required to build and to configure your installation of Windows. However, you can reset Windows activation only up to three times.
So, you are actually asking about the rearm count. Which is only related to Sysprep due to Sysprep resetting activation. Sysprep doesn't care how many times you run it, it says so right there. Windows activation cares, which is a different issue altogether. The rearm count is three in Windows 10 as well as 7.
You must not use Sysprep to reconfigure an existing installation of Windows that has already been deployed. Use Sysprep only to configure new installations of Windows.
Even more specifics about when Sysprep is and is not appropriate.
You are using Sysprep to accomplish a goal that it is not designed to accomplish. Even if it works, it isn't the right way. It works for three runs, and then it stops. This is not because of Sysprep, but simply how Sysprep interacts with Windows activation.
On an unrelated note, I have run Sysprep more times than I have posts on this forum. To accomplish goals it is designed to accomplish. I know what it is, does and how to run it. Which is why the concept of rounds had no meaning.