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No Audio/Sound and integrated Intel HD 4000 graphics working in Windows 10 Bootcamp in UEFI mode

I have installed Windows 10 on my Macbook Pro mid-2012 (MacBookPro9,1) using the EFI method. Note: I am intentionally wanting to use Windows 10 in EFI mode instead of the legacy MBR/BIOS method. I used this guide to install Windows 10 using EFI method: https://fgimian.github.io/blog/2016/03/12/installing-windows-10-on-a-mac-without -bootcamp/


Below are the basic specs of my MacbookPro9,1 model:

  • 15inch display with NO Retina
  • i7-3720QM 2.6GHz with Intel HD 4000 integrated graphics
  • Nvidia GeForce GT 650M dedicated graphics
  • 8GB RAM
  • EFI and SMC firmware are updated to latest by installing macOS Sierra


I was able to successfully install Windows 10 using EFI method. After installing Windows 10, I installed the latest v6 of Bootcamp drivers and support software. Everything works except for audio/sound and Intel HD 4000 integrated graphics.


To get the audio/sound working, I tried running the following two files. However, this still didn't fix the issue:

  • BootCamp\Drivers\Cirrus\CirrusAudioCS4206x64.exe
  • BootCamp\Drivers\Cirrus\CirrusAudioCS4208x64.exe


Somewhere in the forums, I read that the audio/sound issue is related to integrated graphics drivers for Intel HD 4000. In the Device Manager, I tried to update the drivers for ""Microsoft Basic Display Adapter" by installing Intel HD 4000 graphics drivers using multiple methods below. In all cases, the drivers are detected but while the drivers are being installed, Windows crashes and automatically reboots.

  • Letting Windows search automatically for updated driver software
  • Bootcamp drivers located in BootCamp\Drivers\Intel\IntelIvb_Win10\Graphics
  • Intel HD 4000 graphics drivers on Intel's Download center website


It would be great if someone can help me get the sound working.


User uploaded file


User uploaded file

MacBook Pro, Windows 10

Posted on Nov 12, 2016 12:17 PM

Reply
7 replies

Nov 13, 2016 4:34 PM in response to Zythyr

Zythyr wrote:


How do you know that the mid 2012 model is a preUEFI model? I want to do EFI install so I can have more than 4 partitions on my hard drive, and I hear the boot time is much faster.


When I look at Bootcamp's info.plist, my model (MacbookPro9,1) is not listed under the "preUEFI" as show below:


<key>PreUEFIModels</key>

<array>

<string>MacBook7</string>

<string>MacBookAir5</string>

<string>MacBookPro10</string>

<string>MacPro5</string>

<string>Macmini6</string>

<string>iMac13</string>

</array>

You are misinterpreting the array. If you notice, there is not MBP8,x, MBP7,x,... . The array indicates the models or prior models as preUEFI. Any MBP10,x or older is a preUEFI model.


Please also see How to identify MacBook Pro models - Apple Support, which indicates that any MBP model, prior to Late 2013 is preUEFI.


Could it be that Bootcamp v6 is not downloading the proper drivers for the EFI install in order for the sound to work? In macOS Sierra, is there any modifications I need to do to Bootcamp's info.plist so that it will download the proper drivers that will enable the audio in EFI version of Windows 10 for my MacbookPro9,1 model?


BC6 is downloading appropriate drivers. It does not download any EFI firmware to update a Mac. Do not modify the Info.plist.


This is W10 on a 13-in MBP 2012 in legacy BIOS. Notice that Cirrus Audio drivers are installed.


User uploaded file

Nov 13, 2016 1:28 PM in response to Loner T

How do you know that the mid 2012 model is a preUEFI model? I want to do EFI install so I can have more than 4 partitions on my hard drive, and I hear the boot time is much faster.


When I look at Bootcamp's info.plist, my model (MacbookPro9,1) is not listed under the "preUEFI" as show below:


<key>PreUEFIModels</key>

<array>

<string>MacBook7</string>

<string>MacBookAir5</string>

<string>MacBookPro10</string>

<string>MacPro5</string>

<string>Macmini6</string>

<string>iMac13</string>

</array>


Could it be that Bootcamp v6 is not downloading the proper drivers for the EFI install in order for the sound to work? In macOS Sierra, is there any modifications I need to do to Bootcamp's info.plist so that it will download the proper drivers that will enable the audio in EFI version of Windows 10 for my MacbookPro9,1 model?

Nov 14, 2016 11:32 PM in response to Loner T

Loner T,


Thanks for providing insight. It's really helpful.


I have some follow up questions:


1) I am still trying to understand what exactly is causing Intel HD 4000 drivers from being installed in the EFI mode? It seems to detect that there is integrated graphics device and its missing the drivers, but upon installing the drivers, the system crashes... Is there no possible way with software modification, driver hacking, or EFI modification to get graphics/audio to work in EFI install of Windows 10 on a PreUEFI model? Is this a hardware issue or there is still hope for a software fix?


2) Referring to question 1, is there a EFI firmware modification that can be done? What if I install a firmware for a Macbook Pro 2014 or 2015 on my 2012 model? Would it be even possible?


3) One reason I was trying to do EFI install was so I can have more than 4 partitions on HDD/SSD on my Macbook Pro mid 2012. I want to triple boot macOS, Ubuntu, and Windows 10. In addition, EFI install provides faster boot-up times. Is there any other alternative you can suggest since I can't do EFI install of Windows?


4) I did a MBR/BIOS legacy install of Windows 10. Everything including audio works. There is only one issue; I am unable to get integrated Intel HD 4000 graphics to work. In the Device Manager, Intel HD 4000 display drivers are not visible. Only the dedicated GeForce GT 650M drivers are visible. I manually tried to install the Intel HD 4000 drivers, but I am getting an error. Here are more details on the issue: https://apple.stackexchange.com/questions/260668/intel-hd-4000-graphics-device-d rivers-missing-in-windows-10-bootcamp-on-macbook

Nov 15, 2016 5:17 AM in response to Zythyr

Zythyr wrote:


1) I am still trying to understand what exactly is causing Intel HD 4000 drivers from being installed in the EFI mode? It seems to detect that there is integrated graphics device and its missing the drivers, but upon installing the drivers, the system crashes... Is there no possible way with software modification, driver hacking, or EFI modification to get graphics/audio to work in EFI install of Windows 10 on a PreUEFI model? Is this a hardware issue or there is still hope for a software fix?

The Audio devices are exposed by the CSM-BIOS layer which is supported on EFI systems. If EFI is used, the BIOS layer is never invoked, hence the missing devices. Instead of hacking/modifications, why not use the available method. This is not a hardware issue. This is by design. I have investigated the possibility of making the pre-2012 models as EFI compliant, but there is no interest.


2) Referring to question 1, is there a EFI firmware modification that can be done? What if I install a firmware for a Macbook Pro 2014 or 2015 on my 2012 model? Would it be even possible?

You will cause more problems than solve them. Apple will not allow cross-model firmware installation. Most likely you will have to take the Mac back to Apple Genii to put back the supported FW. I strongly recommend against such experiments, unless it is an experiment.



3) One reason I was trying to do EFI install was so I can have more than 4 partitions on HDD/SSD on my Macbook Pro mid 2012. I want to triple boot macOS, Ubuntu, and Windows 10. In addition, EFI install provides faster boot-up times. Is there any other alternative you can suggest since I can't do EFI install of Windows?


Get a Late 2013 or a later model, and use EFI/GPT. EFI is 'faster' but for a consumer, a few seconds of boot time is not tragic. If you buy a later model, W7 is supported on 2013-2014 models only.



4) I did a MBR/BIOS legacy install of Windows 10. Everything including audio works. There is only one issue; I am unable to get integrated Intel HD 4000 graphics to work. In the Device Manager, Intel HD 4000 display drivers are not visible. Only the dedicated GeForce GT 650M drivers are visible. I manually tried to install the Intel HD 4000 drivers, but I am getting an error. Here are more details on the issue: https://apple.stackexchange.com/questions/260668/intel-hd-4000-graphics-device-d rivers-missing-in-windows-10-bootcamp-on-macbook

This is by design. Use a Linux variant and test. The W10 device driver update methodology is quite abysmal and the forced updates are far worse.


If you are primarily a Windows user, I suggest buying a PC, instead of such contortions to make a product do something outside it's designed tolerances. I personally have stayed away from W10 to avoid these issues (except to experiment). W7 is far more stable.

No Audio/Sound and integrated Intel HD 4000 graphics working in Windows 10 Bootcamp in UEFI mode

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