The Bendino V10A is a multi-interface breakout box/PCIe combo device released in the late 2000s. It functions as:

: Many legacy Pinnacle PCI cards face a "2GB RAM" limitation on 64-bit systems. If your computer has more than 2GB of RAM, the system may crash during video capture when using older 64-bit drivers. Success with Windows 7/10

: A legacy Hardware Installer for Studio 10 includes 64-bit drivers for various MovieBoard products, though it notes they were not extensively tested with later versions.

Before downloading anything, verify that your card uses the Philips chipset: Press Windows Key + X and select .

Finding functional 64-bit drivers for legacy hardware like the Pinnacle Systems Bendino V10A TV tuner card can be a major challenge. Many of these older devices were originally designed during the Windows XP and 32-bit era. However, with the right approach and compatibility workarounds, you can often get this hardware working on modern 64-bit operating systems.

Once the drivers are installed, you need to configure your capture software.

Most Pinnacle Bendino cards were manufactured during the Windows XP and Windows Vista eras. The drivers included on the original installation discs were strictly 32-bit. When Windows 7, 8, and eventually 10 and 11 arrived with 64-bit architecture as the standard, the old kernel-mode drivers for the V10a were rendered obsolete and incompatible.

Look for an .inf file (e.g., saa7134.inf or pcap7134.inf ), select it, and click , then OK .

Navigate to > Advanced options > Startup Settings > Restart .

Return to , right-click your unknown multimedia device, and select Update driver . Click Browse my computer for drivers .

Hardware preservation specialist with 15 years of experience in legacy driver reverse engineering. Maintainer of the bendino-64 GitHub project.