Re: Amd Mobility Radeon Hd 5000 Series Driver Windows 10 64-bit Download

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Mazie Wingeier

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Jul 12, 2024, 11:16:45 PM7/12/24
to teostorelan

Same exact thing here, I installed AMD's new Windows 10 drivers but I guess they don't support our GPUs since they're pretty old but I really hope there's a solution to this other than downgrading back to Win 7.

amd mobility radeon hd 5000 series driver windows 10 64-bit download


تنزيل الملف >>> https://oyndr.com/2yZHUT



I checked AMD's new driver's Supported Procuts and HD 5000 Series is on the list so drivers may not be the problem. I also disabled Driver Signature Enforcement and I don't know if it's related but now it's not code 43 anymore, it's code 52 now.

Just to pile on here, I'm having the exact same problem. The default video driver is just roasting my processor, too. I'm beginning to regret even trying to update to Windows 10. Hopefully this will get resolved in the next week or I'm going to revert back to 7.

I'd love to return to Windows 7 for the time being but for some bloody reason, Windows 10 took around 20 hours to install, I don't know why, it just did (Not counting the download time which was about 8 hours), don't know why, I have a 5400 RPM 500 GB WD HDD which works completely fine so it wasn't the HDD and I really don't want to go through that again but on the other hand, I can't watch a YouTube video at more than 15 FPS if the quality is above 360p...

I fixed it! Here's how:

I downloaded the latest AMD drivers for Windows 10 and installed them.
Then I downloaded the HP provided drivers for Windows 7
These drivers said that everything was up to date so I uninstalled the 5000 series in Device Manager, then rebooted.
After the reboot, I had Video Controller (VGA Compatible), I clicked on it and went to update drivers and choose to browse my computer.
I chose "C:\SwSetup\SP49517" and that installed the display drivers and the screen went black.
I waited a while to be sure that the drivers were installed and then turned off the laptop with the power button.
When the laptop powered back on, it was working.
Now both 5000 series and 4200 series are working.

The only problem is that Windows Update is trying to update the drivers so I'm scared to let it update, how do I stop it from updating the AMD drivers but allow it to download Windows updates?

You should look at this ( -systems/workaround-arrives-to-stop-forced-windows-1... it says how to stop Windows from updating the AMD drivers, I did this but the update is still in the list, I don't know if it'll install automatically but you should try and see. (stop the updates from happening automatically and then install the new drivers.)

Please are there ATI Mobility Radeon HD 5000 series drivers for windows 8 64 bit? I have tried to update my HP ENVY 14-1260 BEATS drivers online. It automatically gave me a black screen. I could still hear the music I was playing before it went black. Please help.

I have tried to install the drivers from the AMD website. I selected "Automatically Detect and Install Your Driver" . After downloading the Radeon Crimson Relive and installing it, I received a message saying that AMD installer cannot continue due to unsupported Operating system(my OS is windows 8).

My computer only boots to the desktop if there's no AMD drivers installed. Furthermore, I ran the HP Support Assistant and it doesn't even notify me that the AMD graphics are not up to date, it says all the drivers are updated. The AMD graphics of the display adapter in Device Manager on my computer still have that yellow sign.

I had some graphics problems with this VGA card in Linux and I found (here) that I have this double-VGA type of GPU (if my terms are correct). I gave up using Linux on that PC but now I want to have a bit more control in Windows (7). The system works fine in windows, but sometimes the cooler gets noisy for minute tasks and I guess that is because the discrete card is used: I want to be able to control the way this works.

Following Ramhound's comments, I searched specifically for an OEM driver (AMD driver modified by HP) and found (here only 64-bit version for Win7 and Win 8 versions. The Win8-32bit manager installs on the system but then reports that it cannot find any drivers.

Thanks to the advice given by and31415 (in the comments under other question) I was able to install the Catalyst driver and the Catalyst Control Center (and the rest of the Catalyst/AMD suite).The advice was to find first the harware's id.

So, the driver and the CCC application that I had to install were those modified by HP (downloaded from here). As stated in the comment, I used the 64-bit AMD driver and the Intel Win8 32-bit driver on a Win 7 32-bit system. This also confirms the comments made above by Ramhound on using the OEM drivers.

However, I have to add that after a short while I noticed that the Catalyst AMD/ATI driver was taking a lot of resources, which made me doubt that I needed that in fact. It is intended for game playing and other intense use of the GPU, but I do not need that. In fact, I was just searching for a proper driver that would make the fans as quite as possible while keeping the system safe. The AMD driver and card are made for high-energy consuming tasks and the fans would by used more in such cases; so, fans were not quieter, on the contrary (one is incited by CCC to add more applications to the list of apps using the discrete card); while the Task Manager was showing oddly 6-7 instances of the ATI driver each using 25-50 MB of RAM (and that did not happen before).

I managed to put back some drivers, but I was not able to install an AMD application with a GUI intended for switching between the two cards and I am not sure that I need that (I guess the switching is done according to the needs of different applications running - ?), but I found an answer to the question:

to install an AMD/ATI Catalyst driver in Windows 7 on a computer like mine go to Device Manager, Display adapters, right click on the adapter (if might have only a generic name), "Update Driver Software", and then "Browse my computer for driver software".

What was happening when running the .exe packages from AMD like the one mentioned in the question was that some files were un-packed in C:\AMD. So, I browsed the computer to one of the latest versions I found: C:\AMD\Support\14-4-mobility-win7-win8-win8.1-32-dd-ccc-whql\Packages\Drivers...

AMD does no onger support Switchable Graphics (because they no longer use that system, they now use "Dual Graphics", two VGAs working as if they were one) to have the Switchable Graphics again, and your card updated too, you need to download the latest beta drivers (make sure that it says "mobility", if you install desktop drivers you'll screw up), install everything, and then, you have to download Catalyst Mobility 12.8 or 12.9.

While you are downloading that, you need to uninstall Catalyst Control Center (go to the list of programs installed, double click "AMD Catayst Install Manager, click next, and choose the first option, then select that you want to uninstall CCC), well now open Catalyst 12.8 (or 12.9) installer, and install CCC (and only CCC, uncheck anything else). You have switchable graphics again now.

I've worked with Dells for many years, and was a Warranty Field tech for a couple of years, now in a corporate Dell environment. I've seen this happen in laptops, and the best solution I've seen is to uninstall all current drivers - AMD and Intel. Reboot, then Windows will install its own.

Try installing the Intel driver, with a reboot. When Win comes back, see if the AMD installer will allow to extract files. If so, go through device manager and install the drivers. Be sure to tell Device Manager that you want to look for your own drivers in a specific location.

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