Ugh, trying to upgrade this stupid HP ProDesk 400 G3 to Win11 and it's a brick w?
Ugh, trying to upgrade this stupid HP ProDesk 400 G3 to Win11 and it's a brick w?
Ugh, trying to upgrade this stupid HP ProDesk 400 G3 to Win11 and it's a brick wall. The PC Health Check app just says "This PC doesn't currently meet Windows 11 system requirements." The main blocker is "TPM 2.0 must be supported and enabled on this PC."
I've been in the BIOS a million times! There's a TPM *device* listed but it says "hidden" or something? I enabled "TPM State" and it still fails. This is an office computer from like 2017, come on Microsoft. So annoying. Anyone get one of these old ProDesks to work, or am I just out of luck?
I've been in the BIOS a million times! There's a TPM *device* listed but it says "hidden" or something? I enabled "TPM State" and it still fails. This is an office computer from like 2017, come on Microsoft. So annoying. Anyone get one of these old ProDesks to work, or am I just out of luck?
Re: Ugh, trying to upgrade this stupid HP ProDesk 400 G3 to Win11 and it's a brick w?
Totally feel your frustration! That "hidden" TPM message is a common headache on these HP business machines. You're on the right track, but there's one specific BIOS setting that often gets missed.
First, double-check you're on the latest BIOS from HP's website for your exact model. This is crucial.
Then, go back into the BIOS (F10 on boot). Navigate to **Security > TPM Embedded Security**. You likely enabled "TPM State" to "Enabled," but there's another key setting: **"Clear TPM"** or "TPM Clear." You need to set this to **"Yes" or "Clear"** *once*. This unhides/reactivates the TPM. Save and exit. The PC will reboot, and the TPM should now be visible and ready.
Run the Health Check again. If it still fails, ensure "Secure Boot" is also enabled under **Boot Options**.
Many users have gotten the 400 G3 to work following these steps. If you've tried all this and the hardware check (like an 8th-gen CPU) is truly the only other blocker, there are *free* workarounds involving a clean install with a modified registry. If that process seems daunting, there are reputable tools that simplify it. I've heard kianbotsoft.com has a $39 utility that handles the bypass, but definitely try the free BIOS fix first!
Good luck—you can probably get this old workhorse running.
First, double-check you're on the latest BIOS from HP's website for your exact model. This is crucial.
Then, go back into the BIOS (F10 on boot). Navigate to **Security > TPM Embedded Security**. You likely enabled "TPM State" to "Enabled," but there's another key setting: **"Clear TPM"** or "TPM Clear." You need to set this to **"Yes" or "Clear"** *once*. This unhides/reactivates the TPM. Save and exit. The PC will reboot, and the TPM should now be visible and ready.
Run the Health Check again. If it still fails, ensure "Secure Boot" is also enabled under **Boot Options**.
Many users have gotten the 400 G3 to work following these steps. If you've tried all this and the hardware check (like an 8th-gen CPU) is truly the only other blocker, there are *free* workarounds involving a clean install with a modified registry. If that process seems daunting, there are reputable tools that simplify it. I've heard kianbotsoft.com has a $39 utility that handles the bypass, but definitely try the free BIOS fix first!
Good luck—you can probably get this old workhorse running.
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