

If it does, does that mean that I have to re-make the rescue USB stick each time I update a driver? That would be self-defeating. But I don't see why that should matter at all.

I have updated my video driver since I made the rescue media. Enabling Secure Boot didn't change anything, unfortunately. Not a simple proposition, but it can be done. If that doesn't correct the problem, the only other possibility that comes to mind would be to try recreating your WinPE rescue media build to include all special purpose video drivers from your Windows installation. please look in your PC BIOS settings for 'Secure Boot' and toggle the setting from its current state to see if this changes anything. Some early EFI firmware implementations had a bug in 'Secure Boot' that caused the max resolution of 640x480 to be available to PE. Rescue Media Builder won’t do it for you, but if you put a suitable graphics driver package into the Rescue Media (or the staging folder beforehand), you may find that it works.Is your PC a UEFI booting system? If so, the screen resolutions available in PE are provided by your PC EFI firmware. He had a 2560x1440 display that only ran at 1600x1200 in Rescue and he was determined just on principle to get widescreen support on his widescreen display. When I boot Rescue Media in UEFI mode on Dell laptops, it runs at the native resolution of the built-in display, even on my XPS 15 9530, which is about 2 years older than your Precision 7510 and has a 3200x1800 display.Īll that said, I remember somebody on another forum finding that manually copying his GPU driver package to Rescue Media allowed it to be loaded. I don’t understand how you’re having an issue with a Precision 7510. And now we’re talking about designing for 640x480? Here I was thinking that Macrium should have dropped support for Windows XP with Reflect V8 seeing as XP launched two decades ago and stopped receiving support 7 years ago, and none of Reflect V7’s major new features worked on XP anyway.
