CPU and Audio related driver issues on cloned Windows 10 SSD

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  1. Posts : 6
    Windows 10
       #1

    CPU and Audio related driver issues on cloned Windows 10 SSD


    Gooday ladies and gents, so the story is that we had quite a lot cloned clean Win10 SSDs from an external partner who basically ****ed it up.
    The thing is all the cloned ones have driver issues, in device manager it marks the CPU (something I haven't seen before) and the Audio Controller with the scary yellow sign, telling me "A driver(service) for this device has been deactivated. Possibly a different driver is able to take over its functionality. (Code 32)" (Translated from german, so you are not confused if its slightly different from the messages you know).

    So, my theory was (well, still is) that because of the CPU and Audio controller issues the pc is unable to properly recognize and/or install the integrated soundcard, leading to the problem that the audio devices are not listed (btw USB connected devices work, if that helps you).

    Basically what I'm trying to find is a way to force it to freshly install those drivers or if there is a repair tool or something similar for these cases, its no option to reroll the whole cloned batch. (Well, to be fair, it actually is the last option)

    Is there somebody having the same experience with a solution or is the only option to reroll?
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 516
    Windows 10 Professional 64bit
       #2

    Hi and Welcome!

    Did you/they clone the same PC to an exact same computer with the same hardware?

    If not, that is the problem and the drivers for that PC will need to be installed to fix the triangles.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 6
    Windows 10
    Thread Starter
       #3

    Masterchiefxx17 said:
    Hi and Welcome!

    Did you/they clone the same PC to an exact same computer with the same hardware?

    If not, that is the problem and the drivers for that PC will need to be installed to fix the triangles.
    Yes of course they all have the same hardware, I checked that multiple times to be sure.
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 2,585
    Win 11
       #4

    Clone is a hit or miss. Works great for some and not for others.

    Making a disc "image" (backup of entire drive all partitions) to a separate drive then restoring that image to the new drive is another option.

    The free version of Macrium Reflect will do the disc image.

    Macrium Software | Macrium Reflect Free
      My Computers


  5. Posts : 6
    Windows 10
    Thread Starter
       #5

    fireberd said:
    Clone is a hit or miss. Works great for some and not for others.

    Making a disc "image" (backup of entire drive all partitions) to a separate drive then restoring that image to the new drive is another option.

    The free version of Macrium Reflect will do the disc image.

    Macrium Software | Macrium Reflect Free
    That's the sort of thing I would like to avoid because that would mean dozens of SSDs need to go through that process, though if nothing else works we just reroll them with adjusted, proper new clones which would probably be more safe.

    Still thank you for your idea.
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 2,585
    Win 11
       #6

    We had a very long discussion, on the Win 7 forum, with the "guru's" about cloning. After many tests, the consensus was image was a sure way, cloning as noted was a hit or miss.

    I used to be a regional LAN/WAN Network and Hardware Help Desk Manager (until retirement). We had disc images that we used for our workstations and servers. But it was not a "clone" type. The workstations (all 55,000 of them) were one brand and had the same hardware and software configurations, just the local addresses were manually set up after the install. The same with the client servers, all 1800 were the same brand and hardware configuration. The local setups were done by the LAN Administrator, but the basic disc image was the same. (we did nightly backups of the servers and that was a full backup every night. We tried incremental and turned out to be a mess).
      My Computers


  7. Posts : 6
    Windows 10
    Thread Starter
       #7

    fireberd said:
    We had a very long discussion, on the Win 7 forum, with the "guru's" about cloning. After many tests, the consensus was image was a sure way, cloning as noted was a hit or miss.

    I used to be a regional LAN/WAN Network and Hardware Help Desk Manager (until retirement). We had disc images that we used for our workstations and servers. But it was not a "clone" type. The workstations (all 55,000 of them) were one brand and had the same hardware and software configurations, just the local addresses were manually set up after the install. The same with the client servers, all 1800 were the same brand and hardware configuration. The local setups were done by the LAN Administrator, but the basic disc image was the same. (we did nightly backups of the servers and that was a full backup every night. We tried incremental and turned out to be a mess).
    I don't doubt that, it's not about whether cloning is they way to go or not.
    Actually what I'm looking for is a way to fix those issues, worst case is that we reroll per image if cloning really doesn't work but we don't want to set all this up again, actually we want to simply fix the driver issues and, most important, the missing audio.

    I appreciate your intel to the topic but as I'm relatively new in this company I can't just force everything to go "my" way (that means avoid cloning in the first place) but actually it was the external partner who just couldn't do it better to support us.

    At this point we invested enough time to justify rerolling but every day we find a new particular update package, driver or similar which should work, but doesn't in the end.
    I'm assuming it's actually something totally stupid like the serial nr. of a particular part or similar that just didn't change with cloning and can't recognize the new one because of that.
    Maybe I'm totally wrong though...
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 6
    Windows 10
    Thread Starter
       #8

    In case somebody runs into the same issue I've solved it - I used the manual way to install drivers and used "Processor" instead of "Intel Processor" which solved the CPU issue, then I could install the Audio Controller in the same way and from there the audio driver was able to be installed, a reboot and boom - the speakers boomed my song.
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 2
    Windows 10
       #9

    Furian said:
    In case somebody runs into the same issue I've solved it - I used the manual way to install drivers and used "Processor" instead of "Intel Processor" which solved the CPU issue, then I could install the Audio Controller in the same way and from there the audio driver was able to be installed, a reboot and boom - the speakers boomed my song.
    Sorry for waking this OLD post, but could you be a bit more detailed when you say " I used the manual way to install drivers " for Windows 10 ????

    Thank you in advance
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 6
    Windows 10
    Thread Starter
       #10

    sulisk said:
    Sorry for waking this OLD post, but could you be a bit more detailed when you say " I used the manual way to install drivers " for Windows 10 ????
    Thank you in advance

    Sure.

    Open the device manager (right click on your windows logo in the left corner) - there you have a list of all your hardware.
    From there, open the processors point (or maybe it's called CPU), then right click on the first core, then update the drivers, then use the second option "look for driver software on the computer" - then use "choose from a list of available drivers on the PC" and either it suggests the available processor drivers anyway, if not look out for it and, according to my solution, do NOT pick the "intel processor" but the general "processor".
    Then repeat this process for each core, afterwards remove the audio drivers and let them reinstall properly.

    Good luck!
      My Computer


 

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