First stop — the manufacturer’s website. Long defunct. Domain parked. Wayback Machine showed a 2014 download page with broken links.
“Driver missing,” Alex muttered.
Then Alex found a dusty forum post from 2016. A field technician in Germany wrote: “LMC-V1 uses a proprietary VID/PID (04D2/5001). Force install the ‘USB Serial Converter’ driver from Windows Update Catalog — but only version 6.7.10.” usb lmc-v1 driver download
Second stop — generic USB-to-serial drivers. PL2303? No. CH340? No. FTDI? The device wasn’t recognized at all. First stop — the manufacturer’s website