I've upgraded my Windows 7 PC to W10 for es and I don't have any new or old drivers. I even tried to install the W7, W8 and W8.1 driver in compatibility mode but nothing worked. Do you know what I can do?

Hello, unfortunately the HD 7000 series GPUs are no longer supported with newer drivers on win 10 or 11, you will have to use a legacy driver that will not support the latest games, but older games will work. If you go to AMD.com you can select Drivers, then choose the AMD Radeon HD 7000M series. If you have an integrated GPU that is the HD 7000M series. Of course there are unsupported drivers but use at your own risk, if you want to try those search the internet for "NimeZ" drivers. Good luck!


Sapphire Amd Radeon Hd 7770 Driver Download


DOWNLOAD 🔥 https://tiurll.com/2yGbhi 🔥



I just recently had to download all the software/drivers. I got the Sapphire Radeon HD 7700, running Win10 x64 and so far, works fine. I got the optional drivers , so should work, but if you have issues get the (recommended) one. Here's the link for all drivers and software, if you need as well. -radeon-hd/amd-radeon-hd-7000-series/amd-radeon-hd-7770-g...

I have had my XPS 8500 up and running for about 2 years now. Well, yesterday I went to use the computer and both monitors connected to the AMD Radeon HD 7770 video card weren't working. So, I powered down the computer and I opened up the computer case and pulled out the video card and inspected it and all look good and I reseeded it back into the PCI express slot. Well, that didn't work. So, next I checked to see if there was newer bios for the mother board, so I went from A09 to A12 in the bios. That didn't work. So, I downloaded the latest video drivers for the AMD Radeon HD 7770 and installed them and that didn't work. I ran the advance diagnostic system test from the Dell website and everything came back as "passed". I don't have another desktop computer I can put the video card into to test it out.

I read a lot about the AMD Radeon HD 7770 1 GB card requires 500W minimum on the power supply and the XPS 8500 is a 460 Watt power supply. But, I am assuming since it has working this long, why would that matter now. I also did the trick of removing the bios battery and then replacing it and resetting the bios, and that didn't work. I have uninstalled and reinstalled the AMD Radeon HD 7770 drivers two times and that didn't work either. The AMD Radeon HD 7770 doesn't show up at all in the device manager. And I looked through every device within the device manager and all the drivers are working fine.

So, anyone have any suggestions or thoughts? Did the AMD Radeon HD 7770 video card die? Or did the PCI express x16 slot die? Did the power supply get weak and now can't provide enough power to the video card? This was a certified refurbished box when I bought it.

I tested the PCIe connector from the powersupply and I read 12.25 Volts between yellow (+) and black (-) for all the 3 separate connectors on the plug. So, looks like the powersupply is supplying the proper voltage to the AMD Radeon HD 7770 video card. Now, it's a question if the video card crapped out or the PCI express x16 slot has. I hate to buy another video card and it turns out it wasn't the video card. Any other thoughts?

Unfortunately it doesn't show up at all in the device manager, it doesn't see it under display adapters. If I turn on "Show hidden devices" it shows it but it's faded out and you can't do anything with it but uninstall it or update driver software. I tried uninstalling it and now it doesn't show it at all even when I select show hidden devices. 


I have another video card I ordered yesterday and it should be here today. I will soon find out if the card died or the PCI-e x16 slot died.

So I'm building my VOGONG (Very Old Games On New GPU) system; it's based on Biostar A780L3G mobo (integrated GPU disabled), AMD Athlon II X4 620, 3GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 7770, and Windows XP SP2. The goal is to test how well does Radeon HD 7770 run old Direct3D/OpenGL games; titles like MDK, Monster Truck Madness, Hellbender, Crimson Skies, and Jane's World War II Fighters, with AA and AF maxed. Those games run well on GeForce GTX 280 except Hellbender and Jane's World War II Fighters, by the way. The system is also to test how much would the lowly Athlon II CPU bottleneck newer games like F.E.A.R and Left 4 Dead.

Whenever I search "HD 7770 drivers for Windows XP" on AMD website, the site always gives me Catalyst 14.4. But whenever I Google "best catalyst for windows xp", the top search results are Catalyst 6.11 and Catalyst 13.9. I guess 6.11 would be too old for Radeon HD 7770, but 13.9 can run the said GPU. So will it be better to use 13.9 or 14.4?

Based on my experience with nVidia, newer drivers tend to have worse backward compatibility with old games, so I tend to use the oldest driver possible that can still run my GeForce. But how about Catalyst? It is said Radeon GPU's are like fine wine; the older it is, the more stable it becomes, because Radeon drivers always improve with newer versions. But does the same apply to old games?

It hasn't been long since we tested our TweakTown Prodigy PC, where we took a look at the performance on our Sapphire Radeon HD 7770 FleX Edition GPU at 720p. Now it's time to crank things up a bit, and move onto 1080p.

Before we get into the numbers, I expected to see a big drop in frame rate moving from 720p to 1080p, but was pleasantly surprised to see the Sapphire HD 7770 FleX Edition hold up at 1080p. We want to obviously hit 60 FPS, which is why we test our system at max settings, and medium settings. This gives us the best of both worlds when it comes to results.

This PC was built for the purpose of 720p gaming, but we thought we'd see how we go at 1080p. We'll probably end up doing another couple of tests at 2560x1440, too. The specs of the TweakTown Prodigy PC are as follows:

As usual, I'd like to thank our friends at BitFenix, Corsair, Sapphire and GIGABYTE for supplying the hardware for this build. Without these amazing companies (and my various friends at those companies) none of this would be possible, so thanks for your help, guys and girls.

Since our build guide on the Prodigy, I've swapped out the previous RAM we had installed, which was a Corsair 8GB kit of 1866MHz RAM for Corsair's new Vengeance Pro 2400Mhz kit. I've also updated our drivers to the Catalyst 13.6 Beta 2 set.

Straight out of the gate, and we have some low FPS on the Extreme Preset in Sleeping Dogs: a minimum of 12 FPS and an average of 17 FPS. This isn't playable. Sure, you could play at an average of 17 FPS, but it just wouldn't be a nice gaming experience at all.

Knocking the detail down to the Medium Preset, and the FPS soars. We go from a minimum of 12 FPS to 60.7 FPS, which is an absolutely huge change. The average FPS jumps from just 17 to a way better 87.6 FPS. Now, playing with an average of 87.6 FPS is a much better position to be in.

Tomb Raider saw much better minimum FPS results, with a minimum of 15.1 FPS on the Ultimate Preset at 1080p. The average wasn't much better, at just 20 FPS. Again, I wouldn't play at this frame rate, but some people don't mind the low FPS.

BioShock Infinite's results were close to Tomb Raider's, with a minimum of 12.5 FPS and an average of 26 FPS on the Ultra DX11 w/DDoF Preset. 26 FPS is close to the mid-range FPS requirement of 30 FPS, which isn't too bad.

Shifting gears down to Medium, and we find ourselves in a much better way performance wise. We have a minimum of 28.7 FPS which is good, and an average of 56.8 FPS - just a few frames off of 60 FPS. For a game that has only just been on the market for a couple of months now, these are some great results.

1080p gaming on the Sapphire HD 7770 FleX Edition GPU and a midly overclocked Core i7 3770K was a lot better than I thought it would be. I was expecting a huge drop in FPS, but I was surprised the entire time. I knew the minimum FPS would suffer, having to render the higher resolution, but those average FPS results are what we want to see.

Hitting close to 60 FPS in nearly all of our benchmarks at 1080p on a sub-$200 GPU is stellar. Overclocking should get us past 60 FPS, and since our HD 7770 FleX Edition overclocks like a champion, I expect some great results with the higher bandwidth made available from overclocking at the higher resolution.

One of the primary reasons for this error is outdated Drivers. To resolve this error, you can go to the AMD website and download the latest Drivers for your Sapphire HD 7770 graphics card. If you cannot find the required Drivers, you could download a driver update tool and run a free Drivers Scan to check if this is indeed the problem.

STOP: 0x000000116 error is generally related to your video card Drivers or problems with your video card. The first step towards resolving this error is updating Drivers for your graphics card. You can visit the AMD website and download Drives for your graphics card and then follow the steps given below. Again, if you cannot find the required Drivers you can use a driver update tool and run a free Drivers Scan to check if this is indeed the problem (you can then skip the steps below as the Drivers will automatically install and update)

Windows will now detect the Sapphire HD 7770 as new hardware and initiate the new hardware installation wizard. When prompted for device drivers, select the manual option that lets you point towards the folder which has the latest Drivers.

Many people spend money unnecessarily replacing laptop batteries when they may have fixed the issue with a simple battery reset or a Drivers update. If you are having problems charging your laptop battery, then reading this post may save you a lot of time, money and frustration! 152ee80cbc

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