NVidia Graphics Card Error 43?












6















I am using the NVidia GeForce GT745M card, and I am receiving the following error code in Device Manager:



Windows has stopped this device because it has reported problems. (Code 43)


Looking at the details of the device, I see a Problem Code of 0000002B and the following output for Status:



01802400
DN_HAS_PROBLEM
DN_DISABLEABLE
DN_NT_ENUMERATOR
DN_NT_DRIVER


I am unsure of how to fix this and how to proceed.



I am currently running driver version 9.18.13.4990 (NVidia Driver 349.90) on Windows 10 Technical Preview build 10041.



Disabling and enabling the device will clear the error flag, but nothing detects the device.










share|improve this question

























  • I am encountering the same issue on the official release of Windows 10, with both my Nvidia 765m drivers and Intel 4600 drivers. Both display adaptors give a Code 43, external monitors do not work, and most games and GPU intensive applications will not run. I have tried removing and reinstalling the drivers completely, rolling back to 8.1 and trying the upgrade again, and everything else short of what the manufacturer suggested: Factory Reset (come on Razer, I'm not doing that).

    – zeel
    Jul 31 '15 at 6:18











  • Added a bounty. The formatting of which... is apparently not editable?

    – zeel
    Jul 31 '15 at 6:34
















6















I am using the NVidia GeForce GT745M card, and I am receiving the following error code in Device Manager:



Windows has stopped this device because it has reported problems. (Code 43)


Looking at the details of the device, I see a Problem Code of 0000002B and the following output for Status:



01802400
DN_HAS_PROBLEM
DN_DISABLEABLE
DN_NT_ENUMERATOR
DN_NT_DRIVER


I am unsure of how to fix this and how to proceed.



I am currently running driver version 9.18.13.4990 (NVidia Driver 349.90) on Windows 10 Technical Preview build 10041.



Disabling and enabling the device will clear the error flag, but nothing detects the device.










share|improve this question

























  • I am encountering the same issue on the official release of Windows 10, with both my Nvidia 765m drivers and Intel 4600 drivers. Both display adaptors give a Code 43, external monitors do not work, and most games and GPU intensive applications will not run. I have tried removing and reinstalling the drivers completely, rolling back to 8.1 and trying the upgrade again, and everything else short of what the manufacturer suggested: Factory Reset (come on Razer, I'm not doing that).

    – zeel
    Jul 31 '15 at 6:18











  • Added a bounty. The formatting of which... is apparently not editable?

    – zeel
    Jul 31 '15 at 6:34














6












6








6








I am using the NVidia GeForce GT745M card, and I am receiving the following error code in Device Manager:



Windows has stopped this device because it has reported problems. (Code 43)


Looking at the details of the device, I see a Problem Code of 0000002B and the following output for Status:



01802400
DN_HAS_PROBLEM
DN_DISABLEABLE
DN_NT_ENUMERATOR
DN_NT_DRIVER


I am unsure of how to fix this and how to proceed.



I am currently running driver version 9.18.13.4990 (NVidia Driver 349.90) on Windows 10 Technical Preview build 10041.



Disabling and enabling the device will clear the error flag, but nothing detects the device.










share|improve this question
















I am using the NVidia GeForce GT745M card, and I am receiving the following error code in Device Manager:



Windows has stopped this device because it has reported problems. (Code 43)


Looking at the details of the device, I see a Problem Code of 0000002B and the following output for Status:



01802400
DN_HAS_PROBLEM
DN_DISABLEABLE
DN_NT_ENUMERATOR
DN_NT_DRIVER


I am unsure of how to fix this and how to proceed.



I am currently running driver version 9.18.13.4990 (NVidia Driver 349.90) on Windows 10 Technical Preview build 10041.



Disabling and enabling the device will clear the error flag, but nothing detects the device.







windows-10 drivers windows-10-upgrade nvidia-graphics-card display-driver






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 14 '16 at 13:04









Hennes

58.9k792141




58.9k792141










asked Apr 6 '15 at 1:33









Kaz WolfeKaz Wolfe

3562625




3562625













  • I am encountering the same issue on the official release of Windows 10, with both my Nvidia 765m drivers and Intel 4600 drivers. Both display adaptors give a Code 43, external monitors do not work, and most games and GPU intensive applications will not run. I have tried removing and reinstalling the drivers completely, rolling back to 8.1 and trying the upgrade again, and everything else short of what the manufacturer suggested: Factory Reset (come on Razer, I'm not doing that).

    – zeel
    Jul 31 '15 at 6:18











  • Added a bounty. The formatting of which... is apparently not editable?

    – zeel
    Jul 31 '15 at 6:34



















  • I am encountering the same issue on the official release of Windows 10, with both my Nvidia 765m drivers and Intel 4600 drivers. Both display adaptors give a Code 43, external monitors do not work, and most games and GPU intensive applications will not run. I have tried removing and reinstalling the drivers completely, rolling back to 8.1 and trying the upgrade again, and everything else short of what the manufacturer suggested: Factory Reset (come on Razer, I'm not doing that).

    – zeel
    Jul 31 '15 at 6:18











  • Added a bounty. The formatting of which... is apparently not editable?

    – zeel
    Jul 31 '15 at 6:34

















I am encountering the same issue on the official release of Windows 10, with both my Nvidia 765m drivers and Intel 4600 drivers. Both display adaptors give a Code 43, external monitors do not work, and most games and GPU intensive applications will not run. I have tried removing and reinstalling the drivers completely, rolling back to 8.1 and trying the upgrade again, and everything else short of what the manufacturer suggested: Factory Reset (come on Razer, I'm not doing that).

– zeel
Jul 31 '15 at 6:18





I am encountering the same issue on the official release of Windows 10, with both my Nvidia 765m drivers and Intel 4600 drivers. Both display adaptors give a Code 43, external monitors do not work, and most games and GPU intensive applications will not run. I have tried removing and reinstalling the drivers completely, rolling back to 8.1 and trying the upgrade again, and everything else short of what the manufacturer suggested: Factory Reset (come on Razer, I'm not doing that).

– zeel
Jul 31 '15 at 6:18













Added a bounty. The formatting of which... is apparently not editable?

– zeel
Jul 31 '15 at 6:34





Added a bounty. The formatting of which... is apparently not editable?

– zeel
Jul 31 '15 at 6:34










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















1














I finally managed to find a solution that worked for me (at least for now):




  1. Download Display Driver Uninstaller and the latest NVIDIA Drivers for my card. The OEM drivers will not work!!

  2. Reboot into Safe Mode and uninstall the PhysX Engine and the GeForce Experience.

  3. Reflash BIOS to known working version. (Thank you NVIDIA Forums!)

  4. Boot into regular mode and install the NVIDIA drivers and all the related software.




Apparently ASUS laptops have an issue where BIOS updates and Windows 10 can sometimes cause Code 43s to appear.



In my specific case, I even had to go back to BIOS version 214 for the Asus Q550LF. The flash utility would not accept an older BIOS, so I had to force it with winflash /nodate bios.214 (src).






share|improve this answer
























  • Windows 10 has been released. I would suggest you install the release version too. Also I don't recommend a 3rd party uninstall application as Nvidia graphics installer is capable of doing a fresh install of graphics drivers. Also on 29th July Nvidia released updated drivers for Windows 10 to address from DX12 issues - you may have not got these, at time of writing that was verison 353.62 - would suggest you hold on to the latest WHQL drivers for the future. On geforce.co.uk/drivers you can signup for driver alerts. Also I would opt never to install the drivers offered by the OS.

    – albal
    Aug 3 '15 at 13:34











  • @albal: I am running W10 release. DDU was used because the NVIDIA Installer does not clean everything up. It left a fair bit behind in my (quick) research. I am running the latest NVIDIA drivers, and I am using the GeForce Experience to keep my drivers updated.

    – Kaz Wolfe
    Aug 3 '15 at 16:19






  • 1





    This fix didn't work for me. My understanding is that the fix only applies to UEFI motherboards and/or only to those with multiple GPUs. As for myself, I tried several different driver versions from Nvidia and Windows Update. When installing a new driver, my screen will go blank and stay blank, but my typical background processes are still running. Upon rebooting, it's always code 43. I even reformatted and fresh installed Windows 10.

    – mach
    Aug 22 '16 at 22:14








  • 1





    @Ryan Replied to you at your link

    – mach
    Dec 15 '16 at 21:15






  • 1





    @Ryan Unfortunately, my solution was not great: complete factory restore. I have to believe a better way exists, but I couldn't find it.

    – zeel
    Dec 18 '16 at 10:37











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









1














I finally managed to find a solution that worked for me (at least for now):




  1. Download Display Driver Uninstaller and the latest NVIDIA Drivers for my card. The OEM drivers will not work!!

  2. Reboot into Safe Mode and uninstall the PhysX Engine and the GeForce Experience.

  3. Reflash BIOS to known working version. (Thank you NVIDIA Forums!)

  4. Boot into regular mode and install the NVIDIA drivers and all the related software.




Apparently ASUS laptops have an issue where BIOS updates and Windows 10 can sometimes cause Code 43s to appear.



In my specific case, I even had to go back to BIOS version 214 for the Asus Q550LF. The flash utility would not accept an older BIOS, so I had to force it with winflash /nodate bios.214 (src).






share|improve this answer
























  • Windows 10 has been released. I would suggest you install the release version too. Also I don't recommend a 3rd party uninstall application as Nvidia graphics installer is capable of doing a fresh install of graphics drivers. Also on 29th July Nvidia released updated drivers for Windows 10 to address from DX12 issues - you may have not got these, at time of writing that was verison 353.62 - would suggest you hold on to the latest WHQL drivers for the future. On geforce.co.uk/drivers you can signup for driver alerts. Also I would opt never to install the drivers offered by the OS.

    – albal
    Aug 3 '15 at 13:34











  • @albal: I am running W10 release. DDU was used because the NVIDIA Installer does not clean everything up. It left a fair bit behind in my (quick) research. I am running the latest NVIDIA drivers, and I am using the GeForce Experience to keep my drivers updated.

    – Kaz Wolfe
    Aug 3 '15 at 16:19






  • 1





    This fix didn't work for me. My understanding is that the fix only applies to UEFI motherboards and/or only to those with multiple GPUs. As for myself, I tried several different driver versions from Nvidia and Windows Update. When installing a new driver, my screen will go blank and stay blank, but my typical background processes are still running. Upon rebooting, it's always code 43. I even reformatted and fresh installed Windows 10.

    – mach
    Aug 22 '16 at 22:14








  • 1





    @Ryan Replied to you at your link

    – mach
    Dec 15 '16 at 21:15






  • 1





    @Ryan Unfortunately, my solution was not great: complete factory restore. I have to believe a better way exists, but I couldn't find it.

    – zeel
    Dec 18 '16 at 10:37
















1














I finally managed to find a solution that worked for me (at least for now):




  1. Download Display Driver Uninstaller and the latest NVIDIA Drivers for my card. The OEM drivers will not work!!

  2. Reboot into Safe Mode and uninstall the PhysX Engine and the GeForce Experience.

  3. Reflash BIOS to known working version. (Thank you NVIDIA Forums!)

  4. Boot into regular mode and install the NVIDIA drivers and all the related software.




Apparently ASUS laptops have an issue where BIOS updates and Windows 10 can sometimes cause Code 43s to appear.



In my specific case, I even had to go back to BIOS version 214 for the Asus Q550LF. The flash utility would not accept an older BIOS, so I had to force it with winflash /nodate bios.214 (src).






share|improve this answer
























  • Windows 10 has been released. I would suggest you install the release version too. Also I don't recommend a 3rd party uninstall application as Nvidia graphics installer is capable of doing a fresh install of graphics drivers. Also on 29th July Nvidia released updated drivers for Windows 10 to address from DX12 issues - you may have not got these, at time of writing that was verison 353.62 - would suggest you hold on to the latest WHQL drivers for the future. On geforce.co.uk/drivers you can signup for driver alerts. Also I would opt never to install the drivers offered by the OS.

    – albal
    Aug 3 '15 at 13:34











  • @albal: I am running W10 release. DDU was used because the NVIDIA Installer does not clean everything up. It left a fair bit behind in my (quick) research. I am running the latest NVIDIA drivers, and I am using the GeForce Experience to keep my drivers updated.

    – Kaz Wolfe
    Aug 3 '15 at 16:19






  • 1





    This fix didn't work for me. My understanding is that the fix only applies to UEFI motherboards and/or only to those with multiple GPUs. As for myself, I tried several different driver versions from Nvidia and Windows Update. When installing a new driver, my screen will go blank and stay blank, but my typical background processes are still running. Upon rebooting, it's always code 43. I even reformatted and fresh installed Windows 10.

    – mach
    Aug 22 '16 at 22:14








  • 1





    @Ryan Replied to you at your link

    – mach
    Dec 15 '16 at 21:15






  • 1





    @Ryan Unfortunately, my solution was not great: complete factory restore. I have to believe a better way exists, but I couldn't find it.

    – zeel
    Dec 18 '16 at 10:37














1












1








1







I finally managed to find a solution that worked for me (at least for now):




  1. Download Display Driver Uninstaller and the latest NVIDIA Drivers for my card. The OEM drivers will not work!!

  2. Reboot into Safe Mode and uninstall the PhysX Engine and the GeForce Experience.

  3. Reflash BIOS to known working version. (Thank you NVIDIA Forums!)

  4. Boot into regular mode and install the NVIDIA drivers and all the related software.




Apparently ASUS laptops have an issue where BIOS updates and Windows 10 can sometimes cause Code 43s to appear.



In my specific case, I even had to go back to BIOS version 214 for the Asus Q550LF. The flash utility would not accept an older BIOS, so I had to force it with winflash /nodate bios.214 (src).






share|improve this answer













I finally managed to find a solution that worked for me (at least for now):




  1. Download Display Driver Uninstaller and the latest NVIDIA Drivers for my card. The OEM drivers will not work!!

  2. Reboot into Safe Mode and uninstall the PhysX Engine and the GeForce Experience.

  3. Reflash BIOS to known working version. (Thank you NVIDIA Forums!)

  4. Boot into regular mode and install the NVIDIA drivers and all the related software.




Apparently ASUS laptops have an issue where BIOS updates and Windows 10 can sometimes cause Code 43s to appear.



In my specific case, I even had to go back to BIOS version 214 for the Asus Q550LF. The flash utility would not accept an older BIOS, so I had to force it with winflash /nodate bios.214 (src).







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Aug 1 '15 at 7:55









Kaz WolfeKaz Wolfe

3562625




3562625













  • Windows 10 has been released. I would suggest you install the release version too. Also I don't recommend a 3rd party uninstall application as Nvidia graphics installer is capable of doing a fresh install of graphics drivers. Also on 29th July Nvidia released updated drivers for Windows 10 to address from DX12 issues - you may have not got these, at time of writing that was verison 353.62 - would suggest you hold on to the latest WHQL drivers for the future. On geforce.co.uk/drivers you can signup for driver alerts. Also I would opt never to install the drivers offered by the OS.

    – albal
    Aug 3 '15 at 13:34











  • @albal: I am running W10 release. DDU was used because the NVIDIA Installer does not clean everything up. It left a fair bit behind in my (quick) research. I am running the latest NVIDIA drivers, and I am using the GeForce Experience to keep my drivers updated.

    – Kaz Wolfe
    Aug 3 '15 at 16:19






  • 1





    This fix didn't work for me. My understanding is that the fix only applies to UEFI motherboards and/or only to those with multiple GPUs. As for myself, I tried several different driver versions from Nvidia and Windows Update. When installing a new driver, my screen will go blank and stay blank, but my typical background processes are still running. Upon rebooting, it's always code 43. I even reformatted and fresh installed Windows 10.

    – mach
    Aug 22 '16 at 22:14








  • 1





    @Ryan Replied to you at your link

    – mach
    Dec 15 '16 at 21:15






  • 1





    @Ryan Unfortunately, my solution was not great: complete factory restore. I have to believe a better way exists, but I couldn't find it.

    – zeel
    Dec 18 '16 at 10:37



















  • Windows 10 has been released. I would suggest you install the release version too. Also I don't recommend a 3rd party uninstall application as Nvidia graphics installer is capable of doing a fresh install of graphics drivers. Also on 29th July Nvidia released updated drivers for Windows 10 to address from DX12 issues - you may have not got these, at time of writing that was verison 353.62 - would suggest you hold on to the latest WHQL drivers for the future. On geforce.co.uk/drivers you can signup for driver alerts. Also I would opt never to install the drivers offered by the OS.

    – albal
    Aug 3 '15 at 13:34











  • @albal: I am running W10 release. DDU was used because the NVIDIA Installer does not clean everything up. It left a fair bit behind in my (quick) research. I am running the latest NVIDIA drivers, and I am using the GeForce Experience to keep my drivers updated.

    – Kaz Wolfe
    Aug 3 '15 at 16:19






  • 1





    This fix didn't work for me. My understanding is that the fix only applies to UEFI motherboards and/or only to those with multiple GPUs. As for myself, I tried several different driver versions from Nvidia and Windows Update. When installing a new driver, my screen will go blank and stay blank, but my typical background processes are still running. Upon rebooting, it's always code 43. I even reformatted and fresh installed Windows 10.

    – mach
    Aug 22 '16 at 22:14








  • 1





    @Ryan Replied to you at your link

    – mach
    Dec 15 '16 at 21:15






  • 1





    @Ryan Unfortunately, my solution was not great: complete factory restore. I have to believe a better way exists, but I couldn't find it.

    – zeel
    Dec 18 '16 at 10:37

















Windows 10 has been released. I would suggest you install the release version too. Also I don't recommend a 3rd party uninstall application as Nvidia graphics installer is capable of doing a fresh install of graphics drivers. Also on 29th July Nvidia released updated drivers for Windows 10 to address from DX12 issues - you may have not got these, at time of writing that was verison 353.62 - would suggest you hold on to the latest WHQL drivers for the future. On geforce.co.uk/drivers you can signup for driver alerts. Also I would opt never to install the drivers offered by the OS.

– albal
Aug 3 '15 at 13:34





Windows 10 has been released. I would suggest you install the release version too. Also I don't recommend a 3rd party uninstall application as Nvidia graphics installer is capable of doing a fresh install of graphics drivers. Also on 29th July Nvidia released updated drivers for Windows 10 to address from DX12 issues - you may have not got these, at time of writing that was verison 353.62 - would suggest you hold on to the latest WHQL drivers for the future. On geforce.co.uk/drivers you can signup for driver alerts. Also I would opt never to install the drivers offered by the OS.

– albal
Aug 3 '15 at 13:34













@albal: I am running W10 release. DDU was used because the NVIDIA Installer does not clean everything up. It left a fair bit behind in my (quick) research. I am running the latest NVIDIA drivers, and I am using the GeForce Experience to keep my drivers updated.

– Kaz Wolfe
Aug 3 '15 at 16:19





@albal: I am running W10 release. DDU was used because the NVIDIA Installer does not clean everything up. It left a fair bit behind in my (quick) research. I am running the latest NVIDIA drivers, and I am using the GeForce Experience to keep my drivers updated.

– Kaz Wolfe
Aug 3 '15 at 16:19




1




1





This fix didn't work for me. My understanding is that the fix only applies to UEFI motherboards and/or only to those with multiple GPUs. As for myself, I tried several different driver versions from Nvidia and Windows Update. When installing a new driver, my screen will go blank and stay blank, but my typical background processes are still running. Upon rebooting, it's always code 43. I even reformatted and fresh installed Windows 10.

– mach
Aug 22 '16 at 22:14







This fix didn't work for me. My understanding is that the fix only applies to UEFI motherboards and/or only to those with multiple GPUs. As for myself, I tried several different driver versions from Nvidia and Windows Update. When installing a new driver, my screen will go blank and stay blank, but my typical background processes are still running. Upon rebooting, it's always code 43. I even reformatted and fresh installed Windows 10.

– mach
Aug 22 '16 at 22:14






1




1





@Ryan Replied to you at your link

– mach
Dec 15 '16 at 21:15





@Ryan Replied to you at your link

– mach
Dec 15 '16 at 21:15




1




1





@Ryan Unfortunately, my solution was not great: complete factory restore. I have to believe a better way exists, but I couldn't find it.

– zeel
Dec 18 '16 at 10:37





@Ryan Unfortunately, my solution was not great: complete factory restore. I have to believe a better way exists, but I couldn't find it.

– zeel
Dec 18 '16 at 10:37


















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