Control your radio from across the room or across the globe. Quick Tip: Always check your radio's CI-V Address in the internal settings. If the software is looking for but your radio is set to , the driver will work, but the radio won't respond! To help you get on the air faster, let me know: radio model (e.g., Icom IC-7300, IC-718) are you using? operating system is on your computer? Are you seeing a specific error message in your Device Manager?
Kenji took a sip of vending-machine coffee, bitter as regret. He hooked the Ld-c101 to his logic analyzer. The USB endpoint descriptors checked out—vendor ID 0x1A86, a generic Chinese USB-to-serial chip. But the real logic was in the onboard PIC microcontroller, which translated USB bulk transfers to CI-V’s weird electrical levels. Ld-c101 Usb To Ci-v Driver
To summarize:
USB power issue. Try a different USB port (preferably directly on motherboard, not a hub). Also, check your LD-C101 cable for shorts. Control your radio from across the room or across the globe
You install the driver. Windows recognizes “USB Serial Port (COM5).” You open your logging software, select COM5, set the baud rate to 19,200 (or 9,600, or 57,600 depending on the radio’s mood). You click “Test.” Silence. No frequency readout. No response. The red TX light on the LD-C101 flickers once in mockery, then goes dark. To help you get on the air faster,