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Pci Ven 8086 Dev 2792 Driver For Windows 7 2017

Why do i see many drivers?Below is a list of drivers that may be suitable for your device. With the different devices, they can have the same driver, it's because they all use the same chip manufacturer.How to select driver?If you are looking for an update, pickup the latest one.

  1. Pci Ven 8086 Dev 2792 Driver For Windows 7 2017 Update

Pci Ven 8086 Dev 2792 Driver For Windows 7 2017 Update

Pci Ven 8086 Dev 2792 Driver For Windows 7 2017

Hello, everyone.I got Acronis True Image 2017 today to restore the image from an old computer to a new one. The computer I am restoring to is a a LogicSupply ML340G-10, a computer using the Intel NUC Braswell platform. The manufacturer's page for the computer is here:When trying to use Universal Restore to boot up this computer, I get the error message 'Cannot find device driver 'PCIVEN8086&DEV22A3&SUBSYS22A31849&REV21'. From what I've gathered, Acronis requires the new computer's driver files to be able to restore an image from a dissimilar computer.

However, I'm not entirely sure what that driver is. A Google search for 'PCIVEN8086&DEV22A3&SUBSYS22A31849&REV21' didn't yield any results. Additionally, I downloaded every driver from the manufacturer's page and put them on an external drive connected to the computer, but none of them seem to be the right one (or I'm doing something wrong).Any assistance anyone can offer would be greatly appreciated. Thank you for the response.On the new computer, I can't progress past the initial few Acronis Universal Restore screens, which I'll attach below. I plug the external drive that contains the backup into the new computer.

I turn it on and get to the initial screen (img01891.jpg) and click Acronis Universal Restore (32-bit). On the next screen (img01901.jpg), I press OK to initiate the restore process. A few seconds after it attempts that, it shows me the Interaction Required screen (img01911.jpg), saying that it cannot find a particular driver. I'm not sure what driver it's looking for, but it doesn't seem to be any of the ones I put on the external drive. Ok, Nergal, lets step back a stage here please and go back to the questions I asked in my first post to you.

Ven

Can you answer those questions please. Ah, I feel foolish! My apologies. I completely neglected the True Image step and skipped straight to the Universal Restore application. That's one part of the problem resolved, at least.Upon trying again, I still get the same driver error as before.

This time when I click 'Ignore' and try to boot, I get an error screen saying 'Windows failed to start.' (img01931.jpg) After selecting the 'Start Windows Normally' option, the computer tries to reboot but returns to the same screen. After that, I tried the 'Launch Startup Repair' option, and after going through that process and rebooting, the computer came back to the error screen again. 1) in the bios, check the SATA mode.

Is it set the same as the old computer? These should be set the same in the bios level (AHCI vs AHCI or RAID vs RAID. Can't go from RAID to AHCI or vice-versa).2) If that doesn't do it, then running Universal Restore is the next item. Run Universal restore 'as is' without worrying about injecting any drivers just yet.3) If that doesn't do it, are you using RAID as the SATA mode? If so, you will most likely need to inject the proper RAID controller drives for the new system hardware. What's the driver message it says you're missing again?

I can tell you that the PCIVEN8086 part of the driver ID identifies Intel as the device manufacturer. So my guess is that the driver is either a storage controller driver or a chipset driver. The NUC does not support RST drivers so a standard AHCI driver should work fine. Given that and since your machines are set to AHCI mode meaning that a generic storage driver whould load for your storage drives I would say that your issue is a missing chipset driver.From the manufacturer setup CD or their support site locate the Intel chipset driver for your PC. This may come in an MSI or other format as an installable package. You will need to extract the contents of the installable package to get the driver files.

7zip I believe would do this for you. Once extracted copy all the files to a USB thumb drive so that you can access them during the Universal Restore process. Point to those files when prompted as in your image img01901.jpg Automatic Driver Search - Add folder and Universal Restore should be able to locate the appropriate drivers it is looking for. Thank you for the response.

I can't for the life of me find the Intel chipset driver I would need. I looked at all the drivers that were linked on the manufacturer's page ( but none of seem to be the right one. I downloaded them all, put them on the removable drive, and pointed Universal Restore to the proper folder in the hopes that one would work, but no such luck.I thought the proper driver might be here: , but there didn't seem to be any driver files in the package when I tried extracting from the executable with 7-zip. Thanks for the responses, everyone.@Steve Smith, I tried your approach but was unsuccessful. I installed a basic Windows 7 image on the new computer, copied the inf folder to another drive, and then pointed to that folder with Universal Restore after reimaging the system with True Image.

Still ended up with the same error.@Enchantech, I downloaded the chipset driver from ASRock and it came as an executable file. I tried extracting the contents with 7-Zip, but there don't seem to be any usable individual driver files there. I've included a picture (chipsetpicture.png) for reference.@Bobbo3C0X1, I sent an email to the computer manufacturer, describing my issue, and I received a response stating that the driver appeared to be a SATA controller. They suggested restoring the defaults in the BIOS, but that plan didn't work. I ran Double Driver on the original PC and was able to identify some SATA AHCI drivers (driverlist.png). I transferred those to a spare drive and pointed to them in Universal Restore, but the same error message appeared. The computer wouldn't boot properly after manually adding the drivers in the 'Mass storage drivers to install anyway' section.

Two other things to confirm:1) What was the install mode on the OS of the original system - legacy/MBR or GPT/UEFI?2) What is the install mode on the OS of the new system (assuming it is set in the bios as GPT/UEFI since it's a new system). However, does it support CSM/Legacy mode if the original OS was legacy/MBR?3) How did you boot the recovery media during the OS restore - legacy mode or UEFI?

How you boot the media will determine the parition layout and disk format of the restored image. If the original OS was legacy/MBR, but you boot the recovery media as UEFI, it will try to convert the original OS to be UEFI/GPT and should work, but not always. You can never convert from UEFI back to MBR (it wiill let you, but it will never boot).4) If this is a UEFI system, what is the bootorder in the bios? Does it show 'windows boot manager' for the first entry after the restore? If not, move that to the top. @Bobbo3C0X1, The OS install mode on both the old and the new computer is UEFI.

The recovery media was booted in UEFI. The boot order is as follows:1) UEFI: pny USB 2.0 FD 1.00, partition 12) USB: pny USB 2.0 FD 1.003) MINISATA1:TS128GMSA370@Enchantech, I will try moving the drivers around, but I don't know that that will work any better. During one attempt at restoration, I found that the computer was actually missing two drivers. From my research, I've determined that the second one was a USB 3.0 driver.

When I pointed to the folder with all the drivers in it, the error message for that driver went away. Only the one mentioned in this thread remained. Universal Restore definitely sees that drivers are there; it just doesn't seem to see the one I need it to.

What is the OS from the original system? If it was anything less than Windows 10, you may be out of luck as according to Intel, there are no supported drivers for the N3150 besides Windows 10.

This may be the sticking point as UR can generalize drivers, but without the availability of drivers for an unsupported OS, it's just not going to be physically possible.Intel® Celeron® ProcessorsLaunch dateLinuxWindows 7Windows 8Windows 8.1Windows 10Formerly codenamedIntel® Celeron® N3450/N3350 Processors with Intel® HD Graphics 500Aug 2016Yes4NoNoNoYes5 (64-bit only)Apollo LakeIntel® Celeron® Processor N3000, N3050, N3150January 2015Yes4NoNoNoYes5Braswell. Sorry for bringing up a dead post, but did you ever find a fix for this? I have the exact same driver missing.I even went so far as to clean install windows and drivers on another drive, then pointing Acronis Universal restore to that drive, but I'm still missing 'PCIVEN8086&DEV22A3&SUBSYS22A31849&REV21'.I did the clean install with windows 7 32bit, and the drive I restored the backup with was windows 7 32bit.

Not sure what to do.I downloaded the chipset for my Celeron n3150 and put it on another drive (aside from the clean install drive) and it is still missing it in Universal Restore.If I choose to ignore that driver, it boots to a blank screen. I can get to the windows boot menu (with safe mode, etc.) and I get the blank screen regardless of what I choose.