Source for your latest BIOS installer is here, with matching ME firmware update: HERE.I have the exact same motherboard (ASUS TUF B450-Plus) and almost the exact same error.
Source for the best most recent drivers for this card as of 3/17 is HERE.
You want to power the card before you install drivers or parts of it will not be seen by the HP driver installer and the load will not be complete. You don't need to bring the added two possible ports forward, but it is nice to have and I've posted on how I have done that on HP workstations using a HP 5.25 to 3.5" form factor adapter plus part numbers. Updated installer software for that card can be gotten from the Z620 HP drivers page because the same TI chipset was used on those workstation's motherboards. I have bought these off eBay, but the kit from HP has everything you need without any fiddling. I have posted on all this in here and you can use this forum's search box above to find those posts and the correct part numbers. It also has a SATA power-in port at the top edge of the card.
I'd personally buy from HP for the card, and I'd specifically buy the Texas Instruments chipset based one, called the "2x2" card because it has 2 ports at the rear backplane plate and a "motherboard" type USB3 header at the other end the card that lets you bring two more ports forward with an adapter. It has two rear USB3 ports at the backplane plate, and a SATA power in port at the other end of the card. HP did come out with some PCIe USB3 cards to accomodate motherboards that did not have USB3 built in, and the first had a NEC chipset, and that part of NEC was subsequently bought by Renasus, and regardless this is not the one you'd want. As an example, the xw6400 has only gen 1 PCIe slots, and the xw6600 has only two gen 2 PCIe slots (the two PCIe x16 slots). which PCIe slots in that box are generation 2. I'd say your best bet is the lower PCIe x16 slot for that, but that is an issue you'll need to research. You need to place a USB3 card in at least a PCIe generation 2 slot. USB3 devices want bandwidth that is matched to their capabilities, and a PCIe generation 1 slot is half that.
Need I to update BIOS? How to check if bandwidth is enough (difficult to test on the PCIe x4 slot since hidden from GPU) ? How can I check if the supplied power is enough? In the USB Root Hub (xHCI) Power Management options the "Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power" option is unflagged. Only one of the two USB ports is used, from the Kinect.Īttached to PCIe x1 slot, drivers Renesas USB 3.0 eXtensible Host Controller 1.0 (Microsoft), with power supply coming also from a Molex to SATA cable attached to HDD SATA. In theory one of the Kinect v2 compatible controllers. VID 1912 is supposed to be Renesas Electronics, model µPD720202. This infos from Device manager USB\ROOT_HUB30&VID1912&PID0015&REV0002.
A Win message state "The controller does not have enough resources for this device". Testing with Kinect Configuration Verifier the USB Controller is not recognized but Kinect appear to be tested, but connects and disconnects every few seconds. Installed a Manhattan USB 3.0 PCIe Card to provide 2xUSB3.0 ports to be used with Kinect v2.