<div dir="ltr"><div><div><div><div>I've just started using Chirp with a Baofeng UV-5R and a USB serial adapter that Amazon claims is from Baofeng. The adapter has a genuine Prolific chip (or a darn good counterfeit), and Windows 7 Pro 64-bit recognizes it as a serial port; in addition, I can connect TxD to RxD at the radio plugs, open PuTTY, and see looped-back characters I have typed on the console. So far, so great.<br>
<br></div>However, neither Chirp nor baoclone could open the serial port the USB adapter was assigned to: COM19. Hmmm, 19? Sounds way high for a serial port enumeration. I reassigned the USB adapter to the vacant COM2, and hey presto! Both utilities are able to talk to the radio. <br>
<br></div>Sooo, beware of high-numbered COM ports.<br><br></div>Incidentally, is it normal for the UV-5R to key up when the serial cable is present? I'm going to make a practice of always having a dummy load connected when programming this radio. <br>
<br></div>Regards,<br>Steve<br clear="all"><div><div><div><div><div><br>-- <br>Steve Hersey N1XNX <br><a href="mailto:n1xnxham@gmail.com" target="_blank">n1xnxham@gmail.com</a><br>-----<br>Each of us has strengths and talents that others don't. Whether innate or learned, these are gifts -- and a gift not shared is a sad and lonely thing. Using our gifts for the benefit of all is an ethical obligation for every intelligent being. (The magic only works if you pass it on!)<br>
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