Device Ntpnp Pci0012 Driver ❲HD 2024❳
The driver was never installed, or the files have become corrupted [5.4].
Press Windows Key + R , type msinfo32 , and hit to check your current BIOS version and motherboard model. Device Ntpnp Pci0012 Driver
Right-click it and select , then go to the Details tab. In the "Property" dropdown, select Hardware Ids . The driver was never installed, or the files
Kael had seen it for the first time three weeks ago, buried in the event viewer of an old server he was decommissioning. A single line of amber text: “Device Ntpnp Pci0012 Driver failed to start. Error 0x80070422.” In the "Property" dropdown, select Hardware Ids
If you are seeing this error, you are not alone. This identifier baffles many users because it does not correspond to a familiar device name like “NVIDIA GeForce” or “Realtek Audio.” However, solving this problem is usually straightforward once you understand what this “NtPnp” name represents.
This denotes the Peripheral Component Interconnect bus. Any device connected via a PCI slot (including PCI Express) on your motherboard falls under this category. This could be a network card, a sound card, a SATA controller, or a custom chip on the motherboard itself.
TechPowerUp, a database of graphics card BIOS information, lists an entry for a where the “Physical Device Object Name” is explicitly \Device\NTPNP_PCI0012 . In this case, the correct driver would be an NVIDIA driver for that specific GPU.
The driver was never installed, or the files have become corrupted [5.4].
Press Windows Key + R , type msinfo32 , and hit to check your current BIOS version and motherboard model.
Right-click it and select , then go to the Details tab. In the "Property" dropdown, select Hardware Ids .
Kael had seen it for the first time three weeks ago, buried in the event viewer of an old server he was decommissioning. A single line of amber text: “Device Ntpnp Pci0012 Driver failed to start. Error 0x80070422.”
If you are seeing this error, you are not alone. This identifier baffles many users because it does not correspond to a familiar device name like “NVIDIA GeForce” or “Realtek Audio.” However, solving this problem is usually straightforward once you understand what this “NtPnp” name represents.
This denotes the Peripheral Component Interconnect bus. Any device connected via a PCI slot (including PCI Express) on your motherboard falls under this category. This could be a network card, a sound card, a SATA controller, or a custom chip on the motherboard itself.
TechPowerUp, a database of graphics card BIOS information, lists an entry for a where the “Physical Device Object Name” is explicitly \Device\NTPNP_PCI0012 . In this case, the correct driver would be an NVIDIA driver for that specific GPU.