Pinnacle Systems Bendino V1.0a Driver | 64 Bit
Go to . Press 7 or F7 to "Disable driver signature enforcement." Try installing the driver again via Device Manager. Where to Find the Driver
If you have acquired the driver files (usually containing .sys and .inf files), follow these steps to bypass the lack of a modern "Setup.exe": 1. Use Device Manager Right-click the button and select Device Manager . Pinnacle Systems Bendino V1.0a Driver 64 Bit
Since Pinnacle's original support pages are largely offline for legacy gear, check these reliable archives: Use Device Manager Right-click the button and select
Look for "Unknown Device" or "Multimedia Video Controller" (usually marked with a yellow exclamation point). Right-click the device and select . The "Bendino" name refers to an internal project
The "Bendino" name refers to an internal project or board designation used by Pinnacle Systems (now part of Corel/VideoStudio). These cards were frequently bundled with HP, Dell, or Medion desktop PCs in the mid-2000s.
If the 64-bit driver remains elusive or unstable, many hobbyists use a running Windows XP (32-bit). By passing the PCI/PCIe device through to the VM, you can use the original, stable 32-bit drivers to capture video without compromising your primary OS.
Choose and point it to the folder where you extracted the 64-bit driver files. 2. Disable Driver Signature Enforcement (If Necessary)