spapakons
Member
- Messages
- 74
Hello!
I posted this in www.sevenforums.com and they just ignored it because I mentioned Windows 8. So I repeat it here in the hope that I'll have some help. Thank you in advance.
Sorry for starting a NEW topic, but after a quick search I couldn't find something similar. I will describe you my problem, so you can understand what is going on. Previous summer I upgraded my computer to a more up to date with 8GB RAM. Inevitably, I had to backup my data and install 64-bit version of Windows 7. I could install and use most of my devices, except an old Pinnacle Studio Pro analogue TV tuner PCI card. After some search, I managed to find custom 64-bit drivers fot BT848/BT878 cards and instructions of how to sign them, so I could use them in normal mode. After following the instructions the drivers worked fine in Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit! OK, the original application Pinnacle Vision didn't work since it looks exclusively for Pinnacle's own 32-bit driver, but I could use the card in Nero Vision, Pinnacle Studio Pro, VirtualDub etc.
How did the problem arised: I recently upgraded the computer to Windows 8 and then to 8.1 so I have the latest version. Some devices were replaced with Microsoft drivers and others were not installed. I downloaded latest OEM drivers and managed to make all devices work at their full potential again, except the Pinnacle TV tuner. I went to advanced startup options and loaded Windows 8.1 in the mode that ignores driver signature. I then attempted to manually install the custom BT848 64-bit drivers from Device Manager, since there was no setup program. As you may know, the card appears as two devices in Device Manager. One for the video part and one for the audio part. The audio part completed sucessfully. But the video part displayed the message "Error 39: file not found". The same driver worked OK in Windows 7, so the missing files should be Windows 7 system files that are not present in Windows 8. Is there any way to see which files are these so I can copy them from a Windows 7 installation? How I can determine which file was not found when I see error 39? Is there a log file or what?
Thank you again
Sotirios Papakonstantinou
I posted this in www.sevenforums.com and they just ignored it because I mentioned Windows 8. So I repeat it here in the hope that I'll have some help. Thank you in advance.
Sorry for starting a NEW topic, but after a quick search I couldn't find something similar. I will describe you my problem, so you can understand what is going on. Previous summer I upgraded my computer to a more up to date with 8GB RAM. Inevitably, I had to backup my data and install 64-bit version of Windows 7. I could install and use most of my devices, except an old Pinnacle Studio Pro analogue TV tuner PCI card. After some search, I managed to find custom 64-bit drivers fot BT848/BT878 cards and instructions of how to sign them, so I could use them in normal mode. After following the instructions the drivers worked fine in Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit! OK, the original application Pinnacle Vision didn't work since it looks exclusively for Pinnacle's own 32-bit driver, but I could use the card in Nero Vision, Pinnacle Studio Pro, VirtualDub etc.
How did the problem arised: I recently upgraded the computer to Windows 8 and then to 8.1 so I have the latest version. Some devices were replaced with Microsoft drivers and others were not installed. I downloaded latest OEM drivers and managed to make all devices work at their full potential again, except the Pinnacle TV tuner. I went to advanced startup options and loaded Windows 8.1 in the mode that ignores driver signature. I then attempted to manually install the custom BT848 64-bit drivers from Device Manager, since there was no setup program. As you may know, the card appears as two devices in Device Manager. One for the video part and one for the audio part. The audio part completed sucessfully. But the video part displayed the message "Error 39: file not found". The same driver worked OK in Windows 7, so the missing files should be Windows 7 system files that are not present in Windows 8. Is there any way to see which files are these so I can copy them from a Windows 7 installation? How I can determine which file was not found when I see error 39? Is there a log file or what?
Thank you again
Sotirios Papakonstantinou
My Computer
System One
-
- OS
- Windows 10/11 Pro 64-bit (was Windows 8.1 Pro 64-bit)
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- System Manufacturer/Model
- Custom build
- CPU
- Intel Core i7 3770 3.40GHz s1155
- Motherboard
- Asus P8H61 full ATX s1155
- Memory
- 2x Kingston 8GB DDR3 1600MHz Hyper X Blu
- Graphics Card(s)
- Asus GT 620 1GB DDR3 PCI-E
- Sound Card
- Realtek HD audio
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Sony 19" TV (VGA connection)
- Screen Resolution
- 1440X900 60Hz
- Hard Drives
- 480GB SSD (one for 10 one for 11), 4GB HDD for data
- PSU
- 600W
- Case
- Old white case (to hide I actually have a modern PC)
- Cooling
- Intel CPU fan
- Keyboard
- OEM PS/2 keyboard (to save USB ports)
- Mouse
- OEM PS/2 mouse (to save USB ports)
- Internet Speed
- VDSL 50MBps
- Browser
- Internet Explorer 11, Microsoft Edge
- Antivirus
- Windows Defender
- Other Info
- Dual boot Windows 10 and 11 (change boot priority). Windows 11 installed with compatibility check bypass hack in Legacy BIOS mode, no TPM, no Secure Boot. For details visit Elevenforum