The link that RoasterMen kindly provided is exactly what I get. Re: No SLI option in NVIDIA Control Panel, cannot enable SLI - 2GB GTX670 FTW Wednesday, Octo6:55 AM ( ) Try testing each card separately in only the 2nd slot (PCI-e3) to see if both cards in that slot will get up to load clock speeds.
My only other option is the studio drivers (Also DCH). The driver version that I can download is a game ready DCH version. But that aside, if I have 10 PCs it makes sense to centralize the update process, hence WSUS. Microsoft's track record with patches and drivers is abysmal. Perhaps 432 DCH is only applicable to later versions of Windows 10? Setupcomplete.cmd also installs applications, adjust services to meet our needs, and sets up backups and a host of other things. The PCs connect to a WSUS server, and until the setupcomplete.cmd file sets that group policy I cannot allow an internet connection.
If I use the DCH version of the drives, which is now the only officially supported driver type, it will install fine, but does not have the NVCPL component.ĭuring the clean install of Windows 10 there is no network access until all hardening and security tweaks are done. I get the "Not compatible with this version of Windows" error.
Standard drivers which I managed to acquire following some links that discussed the DDU method won t install. I won't be moving from that for some time because of component removal issues with 1903 onwards (a long story best left for another day). If I remove the SLI Bridge, nVidia control panel tells me I am SLI capable & to fit the bridge. This is a clean install of Windows 10 1809. With both cards in place with the SLI Bridge in place, no SLI option shows in nVidia control panel. The latest driver seems to be 441.66 for the 1650 Super. 432 DCH included it.The DDU solution is pervasive across google. I'm a little surprised about your issue with the nVidia control panel. And the cards themselves seem to work fine. Perhaps something similar would work for you. Both cards show up in the control panel and in Device manager. My solution was to disable the network adapter in the control panel, run DDU, restart, and install the normal drivers. (I haven't yet done the group policy thing to prevent driver updates.) The 432 drivers were re-installed almost immediately. I couldn't install the normal ("game ready") drivers over that. During the installation, Windows Update gave me the DCH version of the nVidia driver 432.00. I recently did a clean install of Win10 2004 Pro (build 19041.1).
I wonder if your issue is anything like one I faced.