The Pinnacle Systems Bendino V1.0A (commonly known as the Pinnacle Studio MovieBoard or AV/DV Deluxe

Right-click → Properties → Details → Hardware Ids
Example IDs to search for:
USB\VID_...&PID_... (e.g., 0x08BB for EMPIA chips, 0x1B71 for Fushicai, 0x0BDA for Realtek).

Part 5: Common Problems and Fixes

Issue 1: "The driver is not intended for this platform" (Error 0xE0000227)

Cause: The .inf file has an incorrect hardware ID or a 32-bit directive. Fix: Manually edit the .inf file. Look for lines like %Bendino.DeviceDesc%=Bendino, PCI\VEN_14F1&DEV_8880. Ensure the .sys file referenced is a 64-bit version. Use a tool like DeviceCleaner to remove old ghost devices.

Chipset: It typically used the Philips SAA7113H video processor and Analog Devices ADV7179 encoder.

Final Verdict

The Pinnacle Systems Bendino V10A driver 64 bit is a salvage operation—not plug-and-play. But with patience, the manual INF method, and a willingness to disable driver signing, you can resurrect this powerful hybrid device on modern Windows. For video archivists and retro-PC builders, it remains worth the effort.

Compatibility Mode: If the installer fails on Windows 10 or 11, right-click the .exe file, go to Properties > Compatibility, and run it in "Windows Vista" or "Windows 7" mode.

Official Support: Pinnacle (now owned by Corel) has officially ended support for legacy PCI hardware. There is no "Windows 10/11" native driver for the Bendino V1.0A.

  1. Restart while holding ShiftTroubleshootAdvanced OptionsStartup SettingsRestart
  2. Press 7 (Disable driver signature enforcement)
  3. Install the driver as in Method 1
  4. After reboot, run the bendino-sign.bat script (included in the GitHub repo) to add a permanent test-signing certificate.
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