Armorview PL2303HX 1m USB to TTL to UART COM Cable Module Converter
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| Brand | roboCraze |
| Connector Type | Usb |
| Cable Type | USB |
| Compatible Devices | Electronic devices with USB ports |
| Recommended Uses For Product | device communication and conversion |
About this item
- Cable length: 1 meter
- Line sequence defined:Red +5V, Black GND, Green TXD, White RXD,
- Pack of 1 USB To TTL Converter
- Works with Win10,need manual install driver
- You can contact our service email to get the driver
Product information
| Brand | roboCraze |
|---|---|
| Connector Type | Usb |
| Cable Type | USB |
| Compatible Devices | Electronic devices with USB ports |
| Recommended Uses For Product | device communication and conversion |
| Color | White |
| Connector Gender | Male-to-Female |
| Shape | Round |
| Number of Pins | 4 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Item Weight | 15 Grams |
| Model Name | TTLX1P |
| Specification Met | USB-IF, IEEE |
| Indoor/Outdoor Usage | Outdoor, Indoor |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Maximum Voltage | 5 Volts (DC) |
| Manufacturer | Armorview |
| UPC | 700253665499 |
| Package Dimensions | 3.7 x 0.9 x 0.4 inches |
| Item Weight | 0.529 ounces |
| ASIN | B008AGDTA4 |
| Item model number | TTLX1P |
| Customer Reviews |
3.9 out of 5 stars |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Date First Available | June 11, 2012 |
Feedback
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers report that the USB to TTL cable works well with Windows 7 64-bit and Raspberry Pi devices, and find it helpful for console connections. The product receives positive feedback for its value and build quality, though opinions are mixed - some find it well-made while others describe it as a "hunk of useless plastic." Moreover, customers report compatibility issues with Windows, and several mention receiving counterfeit Prolific chips.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers report that the USB to TTL to UART cable works flawlessly, particularly with Windows 7 64-bit systems and Raspberry Pi devices.
"...I haven't tried it on a 3.3V Arduino, but it does work very nicely on the 5V boards -- provided you do one little trick......" Read more
"...Giving 4 stars - product works fine and quality meets price. Wish I knew it wasn't compatible with Windows 8, but glad I have work around." Read more
"...I didn't use the 5v line 2 avoid frying the board. The router is working as a bridge and it was still cheaper then buying a wireless card that might..." Read more
"Works great and with Prime/free shipping it makes it a lot more affordable that those sold through other sites...." Read more
Customers like the cable's length, with one mentioning it works well for console and serial connections.
"...I used this cable to unbrick it. This cable works but you have to uninstall the driver when using windows 10 and install a different one...." Read more
"It would otherwise be a fine little cable (I use it to control a ham radio), except that the driver for the chip does not work on Windows 8...." Read more
"...It comes with an adequate length of cable for my purposes, though a USB cable extender may come in handy...." Read more
"...Once I fixed this, the adapter works perfectly to access the serial connection in my ZyXel NSA320 NAS box." Read more
Customers find the cable well priced, with one mentioning it provides good value for gaining serial console access to routers.
"...Giving 4 stars - product works fine and quality meets price. Wish I knew it wasn't compatible with Windows 8, but glad I have work around." Read more
"This device fits the bill for gaining serial console access to routers...." Read more
"My take... For the price it is a good deal...." Read more
"...these things and it's fantastic that they are available at such a low price...." Read more
Customers find the USB to TTL cable to be of excellent quality, with one customer specifically praising its performance as a TTL device.
"...I am sure it is a good product, but the software side of the equation needs some serious work...." Read more
"...So yes it meeets the standard, but if you don't know the sandard wiring colors, you need to go looking." Read more
"Overall, this is a GOOD product. It works nicely with standard Windows 7 drivers...." Read more
"great all around bag" Read more
Customers have mixed experiences with the cable's ease of use, with some finding it plug and play and straightforward to set up, while others report compatibility issues with Windows requiring driver workarounds.
"Works great on Windows 7 64 bit, just plug in and install drivers through Windows update then use your favorite terminal (I used TeraTerm)...." Read more
"Works ok...documentation a bit sketchy...it would be nice if there were a piece of paper shipped with it that decoded the color codes......" Read more
"This device installed automatically in Windows 7 Professional and came right up and worked...." Read more
"...and power my Raspberry Pi (RPi) under Linux Mint 15, not additional drivers required...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the cable's build quality, with some praising its construction while others find it poorly made and describe it as a hunk of useless plastic.
"...Unfortunately the connection wires are quite flimsy, the plastic connector tore off after about a weeks of use, luckily it was an easy fix." Read more
"...Overall durability is good, the main cable is a solid feeling 28AWG line and it has a clean heat shrink tubing seal where the female pin connectors..." Read more
"I have had this for a few months now. The build quality overall is horrible...." Read more
"...Made well and mates with the board very easily." Read more
Customers report receiving counterfeit Prolific chips.
"...work straight away in Windows (any version) then it is a counterfeit Chinese knockoffs according to Prolific..." Read more
"...Nope, it didn't do that either. It was a fake Prolific chip and I had to get older drivers that would work... Still, for the price, I thought this..." Read more
"Apparently these are commonly faked. The Chip is a Chinese knockoff and isn't compatible with the legit drivers or Windows 8/8.1/10 and won't work..." Read more
"Just like others have mentioned, this converter uses a Chinese counterfeit Prolific chip clone, Prolific drivers will not start in Windows giving..." Read more
Customers report that the cable is not compatible with Windows operating systems.
"...(no longer available on Prolific's website, and not supported on Windows 8)...." Read more
"...in this converter-cable is the A revision (HX Rev A) and is incompatible with Windows 8 (yellow triangle in device mgr w/error "10")..." Read more
"NOT compatible with Windows 8. Tried numerous workarounds to get it to work in Win 8 and no go. Installed on Win 7 system and it works fine...." Read more
"...fiddle around with the drivers on Windows, as the official ones are not compatible past Windows 8." Read more
Reviews with images
Ok I had written a good review but now I have to edit it
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on February 16, 2015This little cable works quite well. At first I didn't realize that it was one pin short of being a proper FTDI cable for programming devices like Arduino boards (or even the Raspberry Pi according to one reviewer). I haven't tried it on a 3.3V Arduino, but it does work very nicely on the 5V boards -- provided you do one little trick...
Since it doesn't have the DTR (only a transmit and receive -- Tx and Rx), it can't reset the Arduino circuit for you to put it in the bootloader. That's what the DTR signal is used for during FTDI programming of those devices. However, all you have to do is when you click 'upload' (if building from the Arduino IDE) or run the Makefile (if running from the command-line or other IDE as I do on Linux), is press the Reset button on your Arduino board manually when avrdude launches. Works like a charm.
Though you do have to get the baud rate correct -- I messed that up the first time when running manually from a makefile on Linux. The ProMini boards need 57600 whereas the Uno is 115200. That took me a bit to figure out. Though if you are running from the Arduino IDE, just select the correct board in the menu and you are set...
The other thing is to get the pinout correct. First time out, I got the Tx and Rx backwards too... Here's the pinout for connecting to the Arduino boards:
Red = +5V VCC (only needed if you aren't powering your board with its own supply)
Gnd = Gnd
White = Connect to the TXO pin of the Arduino (PD1)
Green = Connect to the RXI pin of the Arduino (PD0)
I've only tried this cable on Linux. There it just works with nothing special. Though it came up as device /dev/ttyUSB instead of /dev/ttyAMC0, so be sure you select the correct device on the menus or enter the correct one on the command-line. I think for Mac you need an FTDI driver installed -- as I know I had to do that on my MacMini once when talking to the USB port of an Uno board (the generic FTDI drivers should work for it), but I haven't specifically tested this cable there. And I haven't tried it at all on Windoze... Presumably it works there too.
Overall, I like this cable and am well pleased with it.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 5, 2013I ordered this cable to be used with a Raspberry Pi connected to a Windows 8 computer (Microsoft Surface Pro). The cable was detected just fine by Windows 8, but the device would not start. After some research, I discovered that the HXA chip model is not supported by Prolific for Windows 8, and that is what is in this cable. So warning: if you want to use Windows 8, then this is not the cable for you. Perhaps more research before I purchased this I could have figured that out, but it isn't made very clear.
Regardless, this cable works just fine with Windows 7, and I was able to implement a workaround on Windows 8 to get it to work. The workaround is to use the Prolific 1.5.0 drivers (no longer available on Prolific's website, and not supported on Windows 8). You also have to turn off the automatic update of windows drivers, which is not recommended. So, although this workaround works, it isn't optimal and is disappointing.
Giving 4 stars - product works fine and quality meets price. Wish I knew it wasn't compatible with Windows 8, but glad I have work around.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 2, 2014WARNING: If you receive one of these and it does not work straight away in Windows (any version) then it is a counterfeit Chinese knockoffs according to Prolific (source: http://www.prolific.com.tw/US/ShowProduct.aspx?p_id=225&pcid=41%E2%80%8E).
I would suggest your return it immediately and report to Amazon, but if you're like me and you didn't test it on Windows right away, follow the instructions on left brain tinkering blog (source: http://leftbraintinkering.blogspot.com/2013/05/usb-to-serial-prolific-2303-device.html). It really works.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 3, 2018I bought a netgear wnr2000v3 router at goodwill. I bricked the router when i loaded the wrong version of dd-wrt on it. I used this cable to unbrick it. This cable works but you have to uninstall the driver when using windows 10 and install a different one. I didn't use the 5v line 2 avoid frying the board. The router is working as a bridge and it was still cheaper then buying a wireless card that might not work on the linux desktop that resides at the opposite side of the house.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2013After following the driver instructions and playing, got it working. However, just after a few uses, the connectors have fallen off. They need to strengthen them.
I recommend that others use heat shrink tubing when you first get it to see if that helps.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 26, 2014I have been using the adapter to capture some TTL data for a couple of weeks, when all of a sudden it started throwing framing errors. I put the TX and RX in loopback and the RX received data was corrupted. I'm using LabVIEW 2012 and Windows 7, so to eliminate it wasn't a LabVIEW problem I downloaded and tested it with PuTTY and the RX data showed up corrupted on it's screen as well. I went to the Prolific website and downloaded the latest USB-to-serial drivers, but the errors persisted. I bought 2 units, but only 1 shows framing errors. Interestingly, I bought 2 of the NooElec PL2303 USB to Serial (TTL) Module/Adapter units and both of them are now showing framing errors using their TX/RX jumper. I was going to blame a recent Windows update, but with 1 working adapter that doesn't seem a likely culprit. I tried to test it out on my other machine, but its Windows 8 and I have not found a compatible driver set yet. This is definitely a frustrating set back, so I may be forced to try another USB-Serial solution.
Top reviews from other countries
G. HewsonReviewed in the United Kingdom on September 30, 20135.0 out of 5 stars Works fine with Raspberry Pi
It works fine with the Raspberry Pi, but I had a little trouble at first. Unlike other reviewers, I had to swap the green and white leads (RX and TX) compared to the Adafruit lead.
Also, I couldn't get the converter to work initially with a USB extension lead. I was getting errors logged in /var/log/ saying "device descriptor read/64, error -71" and "unable to enumerate USB device", though it was OK plugging the converter directly into the USB socket. I even bought a new USB extension lead: no difference. I don't know if the converter is fussy, or my computer, but plugging the extension into a different socket (actually, the hub on my monitor) fixed the problem.
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LilaReviewed in Italy on December 24, 20155.0 out of 5 stars economico ma funziona
Preso per salvare un piccolo router wifi che si era brickato durante un aggiornamento ufficiale, ha fatto egregiamente il suo lavoro per una cifra irrisoria, anche se ovviamente serve un po' di pratica e di verifica dei pin
PratikReviewed in India on October 21, 20145.0 out of 5 stars Works perfectly
I used it to unbrick my routers.
My tplink 3420 and linksys wr320n were bricked (un usable) while updating their firmwares.
Used this serial - usb converter to debug and repair. It worked flawlessly.
Wish they had provided the driver along with it as well. Since it does not, you would have to download it yourself.
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Gio-TReviewed in Germany on November 19, 20135.0 out of 5 stars Jeder braucht ein USB zu TTL Kabel
Habe das Kabel hauptsächlich für die Verwendung mit einem RasPi, aber funktioniert auch prima mit anderen Geräten.
Gute Verarbeitung und funktioniert wie erwartet unter OS X (mit PL2303HX.A Treibern) und Linux. Wer immer noch auf Windows ist, ist selber schuld.
Die Kabel sind:
- rot: Power
- schwarz: GND
- weiß: RX zum USB
- grün: TX vom USB
Das rote Kabel überträgt auch die 5V mit 500 mA vom USB Port und die RX/TX Anschlüsse laufen auf 3.3 V (geeignet für die verbreiteten 3.3V Boards).
Am RasPi (Modell B) schließt man das Kabel folgendermaßen an:
An den GPIO Pins, die auf der Außenseite des Raspberry Pi liegen angefangen (obere linke Ecke, außen, zwischen SD Karte und RCA/Cinch Video Buchse), von links nach rechts.
1. Pin:rot - 2. Pin: leer - 3. Pin: schwarz - 4. Pin: weiß - 5. Pin: grün
Wichtig: Wenn Euer Pi schon von einem Netzteil gespeist wird, solltet Ihr den roten Anschluss von diesem Kabel unangeschlossen lassen.
Nachdem man die PL2303HX.A Treiber unter OS X installiert hat, kann man sich mit 115200 Baud mit dem Pi verbinden indem man
"screen /dev/cu.PL2303-<TAB> 115200" eintippt (nach "screen /dev/cu.PL2303" drückt Ihr <TAB>, um das richtige Gerät auszuwählen, z.B. "screen /dev/cu.PL2303-00001234 115200").
Viel Spaß!
Dieses Produkt ist ungeeignet für Arduino (Menta, Boarduino, usw.), da der DTS/RTS Anschluss hier fehlt. Hierfür wird ein FTDI Kabel benötigt.
David PreciousReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 15, 20145.0 out of 5 stars Cheap, effective gadget
Great value, useful gadget.
Hooked up to my Raspberry Pi as I type this - powering it via USB and providing a serial console to access it.
For easy reference, I connected it as:
Red (5V): pin 2 (top left), white pin 8 (UART TXD), green pin 10 (UART RXD), black (ground) pin 25 (bottom right).
I'm using Linux; I connected with:
sudo screen /dev/ttyUSB0 115200


