Ld-c101 Usb To Ci-v Driver ❲90% CERTIFIED❳
To find and install the appropriate driver, follow these steps. The instructions might slightly vary depending on your operating system (Windows, macOS, Linux).
Physical Bridge: It converts a computer’s USB port into the 3.5mm mono jack required by the radio's remote port. Ld-c101 Usb To Ci-v Driver
The LD-C101 serves as a replacement for the Icom CT-17 level converter, providing a direct link between a PC's USB port and a radio's CI-V jack. Chelegance Specification USB-A to 3.5mm Mono Plug Cable Length 1.5 meters (approx. 5 feet) Icom CI-V (TTL Level Serial) Typically 9600 or 19200 (Software dependent) Compatible Software Ham Radio Deluxe, N1MM, Logger32, WSJT-X Installation and Setup To find and install the appropriate driver, follow
The LD-C101 USB to CI-V driver offers several key features that make it a reliable and efficient solution for CI-V communication: The problem is never the hardware
For Linux users: The CP210x driver is native in the kernel. Run dmesg | grep cp210x to confirm.
- Check USB VID/PID:
067B:2303(Prolific) or10C4:EA60(Silicon Labs). - On Linux: Use
brlttyconflict fix (sudo apt remove brltty). - Baud rate: Must match radio (usually 19200 or 38400 for newer Icoms).
The problem is never the hardware. The hardware is dumb and honest. The problem is the collision of expectations. The CI-V protocol demands a half-duplex bus. The USB driver expects full-duplex. The CI-V bus requires pull-up resistors. The FTDI chip wants to push. And deep in the registry of your machine, a ghost parameter from a driver installed three years ago for a different radio is still asserting control over COM5.
Flashed the new firmware. Plugged the Ld-c101 into his Linux laptop. dmesg showed the device. He ran minicom to the virtual serial port, typed 0xFE 0xFE 0x94 0xE0 0x03 0xFD—the CI-V command to read frequency.