This option is somehow more dangerous than the previous one because after flashing the video card may not be recognized at all, but it will start and you can reflash it to the original version (so keep it just in case). In the lower right you can change the device id, after choosing the right video card, to a pcie one (the best option is choosing ATI as vendor because these cards are always supported by official drivers). If you don't have any luck finding such a bios, then you can get the bios from your video card using GPU-Z and then edit it with Radeon BIOS Editor. For my video card, the manufacturer released a bios with this model of video card that used a device id from a pci-e one so I flashed my video card to that version.ĭepending on your card's manufacturer you may search for a related bios in the techpowerup database and search on the internet for the vendon id to see if it belongs to a pcie card as well (the device id is on the first row starting with 0x9NNN). Click to expand.Yes, I can use the original drivers without getting any error.
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