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#21
You should give Display Driver Uninstaller a try.
To use it you must set Windows to boot into safe mode first (using the msconfig utility).
Then run DDU from safe mode -> Use the option to uninstall and restart.
Try installing the video driver afterwards.
Good luck!
Thank you Phil! I followed your instructions and they gave me back full CCC functionality.
I updated from Win7 Home Premium.
The Device Manager protocol was a bit different re the actual items to select but still intuitive.
I also tried some of the other options posted here but without success. Regardless, everyone deserves credit for their
efforts and willingness to help.
Very surprising and disappointing that I didn't find any of this on the MS Win10 or AMD web sites. Maybe I missed it but I spent a lot of time on both sites. One post on one of those sites said, "With HD4200 only options are to buy a new PC or upgrade your graphics card". Glad I didn't give up and glad I found you folks.
Best to all,
Leecifer
Did the Phil Gates work around and the green video screen dissappeared and vids were playing in FB etc fine. BUT if I hibernate or switch off my laptop reverts to green screens on vids. I have a Radeon HD 4200 and cleared the newer CCC and downloaded the 13.4 legacy and followed all instructions. If I go to device manager and do the last part it will go back to normal vid and green screen disappears????
So what's the bottom-line situation for AMD Radeon 4000 and 3000 series cards on Windows 10? Will they work OK on Windows 10 with a basic driver from Windows Update?
For the HD 4000 series, yes the Windows 10 in-box driver is fine (and presumably also for the other cards supported by the legacy driver). It's not really a "basic" driver either just to clear up some confusion I've seen elsewhere, it's a fully featured driver just minus the Catalyst Control Center. As others have already mentioned, you could install the older 13.4 beta legacy driver if you really need that, or use alternatives like ATI Tray Tools.
Windows 10 can actually be made to work with some very old cards, it's surprising how many misinformed posts I've read about Windows 10 hardware requirements. I have a laptop with a Geforce Go 6000 series card from 2004 that is working fine with a "proper" driver.
Hi Folks and thanks in advance
Did just updating the the beta 13.4 driver and then running the windows 10 update work? if not what am I missing.
Can you talk me through the process step by step.
Cheers again