USB Serial Port (COM9) Driver Download For Windows 10
Virtual COM Port Drivers for Ross-Tech USB Interfaces
Windows 10 COM port issues As a Windows 10 user, you may face a challenge trying to locate virtual COM ports in the Device Manager of your machine. The RS232 ports option can just be unavailable. The reason is that after a Windows 10 update, virtual COM port drivers may not load any-longer by default for devices of some types. In Internet Explorer, click Tools, and then click Internet Options. On the Security tab, click the Trusted Sites icon. Click Sites and then add these website addresses one at a time to the list: You can only add one address at a time and you must click Add after each one.
Older Ross-Tech RS-232 Serial interfaces can be set to power up as 'dumb K-Line pass through' interfaces. This allowed those old Serial interfaces to be compatible with a wide variety of third-party applications which expect a 'K-line pass-through' serial interface. However, our USB interfaces present additional challenges. Early in their development, we found a number of technical advantages to using a 'direct' USB driver which bypasses the Windows Serial drivers entirely. Hence the USB drivers that ship with VCDS do not emulate a serial COM port and cannot be used with applications that expect to communicate via a serial port.
NOTE: The following applies to our legacy USB interfaces (HEX-USB, KII-USB and HEX-USB+CAN). It does NOT apply to our current HEX-V2 or HEX-NET interfaces. These new interfaces do not use a USB UART chip and cannot be be used for 'dumb K-line pass-through'!
In order to facilitate the use of third-party applications which expect to communicate with a serial interface, drivers that emulate a COM port are available. However, anyone thinking about using them needs to be aware of the following points:
We do not offer installation support for these drivers. They should be used only by someone who is competent/comfortable installing (and possible uninstalling) USB drivers on his PC.
We cannot offer any support for third-party software, nor any guarantee that it will work correctly with these drivers. Of course, the same would apply with a serial interface as well.
That said, here some installation notes:
These drivers are compatible with Windows 2000 and newer. They should work with W2K, XP-32, XP-64, Vista-32 and Vista-64. We do not have any VCP drivers for Windows 98!
Unzip the contents of the download into a new folder.
With an interface plugged in, find it in Device Manager, right-click it, and select Update Driver.
Depending on what drivers your system already has installed, you may have to 'force' these by telling the wizard not to search, but to let you specify what driver to install, then doing the Have Disk and Browse thing.
There's also the possibility that the Virtual COM Port won't install automatically. We've found no real pattern why it does on some systems and not on others. If it does not, find the interface in Device > Manager. The name should show '... with VCP'. Open the properties sheet, click the Advanced tab, and make sure Load VCP is checked. Once checked, disconnect and re-connect the interface.
Once the USB Serial Port is installed, you may need to change the COM Port Number (depending on how high a number the applications supports). Device Manager, Properties sheet for the USB Serial Port, Port Settings tab, Advanced button. The COM Port Number may change if you plug the interface into a different USB port, so I'd recommend always using the same USB port.
VCDS should continue to work fine with these drivers installed. Leave VCDS set to USB, not a Virtual COM Port!
Assuming you've read and understand all of the above, you can download the 'Virtual COM Port' drivers here:
Usb To Serial Port Windows 10
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USB Serial Port (COM9) Driver Download For Windows 10
About Cisco USB Console.
Most laptops and tablets haven’t come with old-school DB9 serial ports for years. For those of us supporting Cisco network infrastructure, this meant using a clunky USB to serial adapter on our PC so we could connect to the console port on our Cisco gear. Cisco finally got with the program and began releasing new equipment with a USB console port to go along with the older RJ45 one. All that’s needed now for connection to the console is a USB A to Mini-B cable and the Cisco USB Console Windows Driver. If you don’t have the latter, don’t worry! I’m going to show you how to download, setup, and test the driver on a Windows 8.1-based PC right now. To begin, log in using a Cisco.com account. If you don’t already have an account, click the Register Now button and walk through the sign-up process. Since I already have an account, I’ll go ahead and log on by entering my username and password and then clicking the Log in button. There are about a dozen different routes to get to the download page for the USB Console Driver. Cisco has one of the most in-depth websites I’ve ever come across. It’s also one of the most frustrating at times. I’m all about easy, so just browse to their Cisco USB Console software download site and you can grab it from there. Don’t worry that it indicates the driver is a Catalyst 3560X-24P-S switch. The same driver works for other Cisco devices with USB console support.To get this free driver from our website right now, click the free Cisco USB Console Driver for Windows 10 download link given below and install this driver for your device to keep enjoying it. Keep visiting our website for more free drivers and software.
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