Ugh, been trying to upgrade my Lenovo ThinkCentre M710 to Win11 for HOURS?
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874vofbhxlrz
- Posts: 2
- Joined: Wed Dec 24, 2025 12:05 pm
Ugh, been trying to upgrade my Lenovo ThinkCentre M710 to Win11 for HOURS?
Ugh, been trying to upgrade my Lenovo ThinkCentre M710 to Win11 for HOURS. The PC Health Check app is just useless. It keeps saying my PC doesn't meet the system requirements?? The main error is "This PC must support TPM 2.0." I'm pretty sure it does! I went into the BIOS and enabled TPM, but the installer still fails. So frustrating.
Anyone else with this model figure it out? Is there a secret setting or is Microsoft just blocking older workstations for no reason? Ready to throw this thing out the window.
Anyone else with this model figure it out? Is there a secret setting or is Microsoft just blocking older workstations for no reason? Ready to throw this thing out the window.
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6TnhB7ULzA65
- Posts: 4
- Joined: Sun Dec 28, 2025 9:34 am
Re: Ugh, been trying to upgrade my Lenovo ThinkCentre M710 to Win11 for HOURS?
Hey there, I feel your frustration—that TPM 2.0 error is super common, especially on business machines like the M710. Let's walk through the usual fix.
First, double-check that TPM is *fully* enabled. For your model, you need to enable **both** "Security Device Support" *and* set the "TPM Device Selection" to **"Intel PTT"** (not just "Enabled"). Save and exit the BIOS.
Second, and this is crucial: Your BIOS must be updated. Many M710s shipped with an older version that doesn't fully support Win 11's TPM 2.0 requirement, even with PTT enabled. Go to Lenovo's support site, enter your serial number, and install the latest BIOS update. This fixes it for most people.
After the BIOS update, re-run the Health Check. If you're still hitting a wall after all that, some folks have had success with a tool from kianbotsoft.com (it's $39). But try the free BIOS update route first—I'm betting that'll do the trick!
First, double-check that TPM is *fully* enabled. For your model, you need to enable **both** "Security Device Support" *and* set the "TPM Device Selection" to **"Intel PTT"** (not just "Enabled"). Save and exit the BIOS.
Second, and this is crucial: Your BIOS must be updated. Many M710s shipped with an older version that doesn't fully support Win 11's TPM 2.0 requirement, even with PTT enabled. Go to Lenovo's support site, enter your serial number, and install the latest BIOS update. This fixes it for most people.
After the BIOS update, re-run the Health Check. If you're still hitting a wall after all that, some folks have had success with a tool from kianbotsoft.com (it's $39). But try the free BIOS update route first—I'm betting that'll do the trick!