So, I'm not sure what happened, but here's what actions I took before this was resolved... and honestly, I think the system just needed one more reboot before it was corrected, but I'm not sure what may have hung up the processes?
- Uninstalled "Generic Non-PnP Display" Driver
- Ensured that my Nvidia GTX 470 drivers were up to date; they were not, so I downloaded the new one and installed. (I noticed NVIDIA Control Panel did not work properly...)
- Reboot the system upon updating Graphics Adapter drivers
- System came back up, and the Monitor was now automatically detected, and it used a "Dell U3011 (Digital)" Driver (I'm assuming auto-downloaded or pre-loaded with Windows?)
- Display Adapter now shows updated Graphics Adapter.
- Verified that NVIDIA Control Panel works now
- Verified that DELL U3011 Resolutions are available; now working at 2560 x 1600 successfully
I'm not sure if that will help anyone or not, but my gut feeling is that Windows 10 wasn't done installing drivers or something and needed one more reboot to finish possibly? Also, added to the fact that because the Generic Non-PnP Display driver was chosen to start with, it wanted to hold on to that driver, despite there being one available for this specific monitor?
Are you saying that the prime/native resolution 2560x1600 is not available in the Windows 10? Please read this sticky to see if it can resolve the issue.
Unfortunately, in Windows 10, the monitor was not even recognized. I had a dual monitor setup and my older Dell monitor was recognized by Windows 10. My DVI U3011 was not recognized. When I went into the settings panel and clicked "Identify", it was not able to detect the monitor connected.
I have downgraded back to Windows 7 for now. If there are formal Windows 10 drivers made of if you have another idea on what I should test, happy to try again.
I can confirm the same issue happened to me just this morning. I upgraded to Windows 10 and the monitor was not recognized. It shows up as "Generic Non-PnP Monitor" for some reason. I tried to use the old drivers I used when I had Windows 8.1 and that did not work.
R272770 drivers were the version I had working in Windows 8.1
I tried to force it to install the driver, but it wouldn't proceed.
I then looked in the Driver Properties to find that it wasn't Migrated.
Generic Non-PnP Monitor Properties
Timestamp Description
8/18/2015 10:39:14 AM Device not migrated
Information:
Device DISPLAY\Default_Monitor\1&8713bca&0&UID0 could not be migrated.
Last Device Instance Id: DISPLAY\DEL4063\5&1201D160&0&UID5243154
Class Guid: {4D36E96E-E325-11CE-BFC1-08002BE10318}
Location Path:
Migration Rank: 0xF000FFFF0000F102
Present: true
Status: 0xC0000719
Like Tyler, any help would be greatly appreciated... This 1024 x 768 isn't ideal for doing AutoCAD drawings... just sayin'.
But I now have a resolution. I had uninstalled Windows 10. After seeing VirtutekVT's response, I decided to do another upgrade to Windows 10. After this upgrade, the monitor was detected automatically. All is well now.
VirtutekVT
2 Posts
0
August 18th, 2015 10:00
So, I'm not sure what happened, but here's what actions I took before this was resolved... and honestly, I think the system just needed one more reboot before it was corrected, but I'm not sure what may have hung up the processes?
- Uninstalled "Generic Non-PnP Display" Driver
- Ensured that my Nvidia GTX 470 drivers were up to date; they were not, so I downloaded the new one and installed. (I noticed NVIDIA Control Panel did not work properly...)
- Reboot the system upon updating Graphics Adapter drivers
- System came back up, and the Monitor was now automatically detected, and it used a "Dell U3011 (Digital)" Driver (I'm assuming auto-downloaded or pre-loaded with Windows?)
- Display Adapter now shows updated Graphics Adapter.
- Verified that NVIDIA Control Panel works now
- Verified that DELL U3011 Resolutions are available; now working at 2560 x 1600 successfully
I'm not sure if that will help anyone or not, but my gut feeling is that Windows 10 wasn't done installing drivers or something and needed one more reboot to finish possibly? Also, added to the fact that because the Generic Non-PnP Display driver was chosen to start with, it wanted to hold on to that driver, despite there being one available for this specific monitor?
Damon
DELL-Chris M
Community Manager
•
56.9K Posts
0
August 8th, 2015 10:00
Are you saying that the prime/native resolution 2560x1600 is not available in the Windows 10? Please read this sticky to see if it can resolve the issue.
tylerjewell
3 Posts
0
August 11th, 2015 14:00
Hi Chris:
Unfortunately, in Windows 10, the monitor was not even recognized. I had a dual monitor setup and my older Dell monitor was recognized by Windows 10. My DVI U3011 was not recognized. When I went into the settings panel and clicked "Identify", it was not able to detect the monitor connected.
I have downgraded back to Windows 7 for now. If there are formal Windows 10 drivers made of if you have another idea on what I should test, happy to try again.
DELL-Chris M
Community Manager
•
56.9K Posts
0
August 11th, 2015 19:00
Do you remember if it appeared as Generic PnP Monitor?
VirtutekVT
2 Posts
0
August 18th, 2015 10:00
I can confirm the same issue happened to me just this morning. I upgraded to Windows 10 and the monitor was not recognized. It shows up as "Generic Non-PnP Monitor" for some reason. I tried to use the old drivers I used when I had Windows 8.1 and that did not work.
R272770 drivers were the version I had working in Windows 8.1
I tried to force it to install the driver, but it wouldn't proceed.
I then looked in the Driver Properties to find that it wasn't Migrated.
Generic Non-PnP Monitor Properties
Timestamp Description
8/18/2015 10:39:14 AM Device not migrated
Information:
Device DISPLAY\Default_Monitor\1&8713bca&0&UID0 could not be migrated.
Last Device Instance Id: DISPLAY\DEL4063\5&1201D160&0&UID5243154
Class Guid: {4D36E96E-E325-11CE-BFC1-08002BE10318}
Location Path:
Migration Rank: 0xF000FFFF0000F102
Present: true
Status: 0xC0000719
Like Tyler, any help would be greatly appreciated... This 1024 x 768 isn't ideal for doing AutoCAD drawings... just sayin'.
Regards,
Damon
tylerjewell
3 Posts
0
August 19th, 2015 11:00
It was not detected at all.
But I now have a resolution. I had uninstalled Windows 10. After seeing VirtutekVT's response, I decided to do another upgrade to Windows 10. After this upgrade, the monitor was detected automatically. All is well now.
alex219781
1 Message
0
January 4th, 2019 02:00
I was able to set custom resolution myself using the 3rd party application, CRU (Custom Resolution Utility).
Make sure you reboot your PC to get new resolution available to select.