Cool info! Thank you very much, this clears up some of my confusion.
I remember seeing the custom VID/PID thing when I downloaded the FTDI driver a few months ago, but had no idea what it was for, and I didn't need it for that unrelated cable application, which presented as an FTDI device.
-dan
On Sep 28, 2012, at 2:41 PM, "Robert Terzi - rct@r-t.org" +chirp+cordless+a79d3bb79e.rct#r-t.org@spamgourmet.com wrote:
On 9/28/2012 4:58 PM, chirp.cordless@xoxy.net wrote:> Update 9/28/12:
Summary: I have Chirp 0.2.3 working in OSX 10.8.2 with my FT60s using an RT Systems cable. I was able to write to both radios on the first attempt with each.
Glad to hear things are working for you. Basically using an FTDI based cable solved your problem.
The RT Systems cables I've seen are made with FTDI chips. However they install a custom USB Vendor ID and Product ID (VID & PID) on them, so they aren't recognized by the generic FTDI virtual com port drivers.
On windows this gives them the advantage that their software is reliably able to find their cable.The user doesn't have to figure out whatcom port got assigned. The disadvantage for the user is that other software like CHIRP work with the cable because it doesn't create a COM port.
I believe the Mac driver you installed, is the same FTDI serial driverjust with the RT Systems VID and PID instead of the generic ones.
There is a utility provided by FTDI, at least for windows that will let you change the VID/PID on the chip.So you can set it back to the FTDI default and not worry about needing a special driver if you are ever so inclined. (The downside is you won't be able to use the RT software on windows since it will only work with their cable with the custom VID/PID (and the ftdi direct driver). This was discussed on this list 6 months to a year ago.)
chirp_users mailing list chirp_users@intrepid.danplanet.com http://intrepid.danplanet.com/mailman/listinfo/chirp_users