Mvci driver for toyota tis x64
2018年8月15日 日常Mvci driver for toyota tis x64
※ Download: https://bit.ly/2w9ws9d
Fair warning: I would not consider this a good investment for someone who does not have a fair degree of tech skill, both when it comes to understanding computers particularly manual driver installation and USB-based communications and the itself. First and foremost: The mini vci cable worked perfectly well for me on a 2017 Sienna SE, using the current release as of the date of this post , based on a Lenovo ThinkPad T500 running Windows 7 Pro 64-bit. PLEASE NOTE: The instructions below are based on a 64-bit OS. THE PROCESS FOR A 32-BIT SYSTEM WILL BE DIFFERENT. I guarantee it will fail. Also, my antivirus software ESET Smart Security threw a fit about several files on the CD being contaminated with a trojan. Google search is your friend! I will add that, after manually unpacking and installing the device driver, I had no other problems and no sign of virus or trojan infection. Start by installing whatever version of Toyota TechStream you plan to use. Plenty of info on the Internet to help you out with that. Open a command prompt window and change to said temporary directory. Extract the contents of the. Close your command prompt window. Plug your Mini VCI cable into a USB port. Ignore any such errors for the moment. Open Device Manager and locate the failed item in the hardware list. It should be easy to spot, as it will have a yellow exclamation point overlaying it. Note that you will likely need to do this twice, once for the VCI chip itself and once for the USB-to-serial-port translation. Point the second prompt at the same folder. Once the process finishes, you should see the two new devices in your hardware list. In order for TechStream to recognize and use the Mini-VCI cable, you will need to add a registry tweak.
※ Download: https://bit.ly/2w9ws9d
Fair warning: I would not consider this a good investment for someone who does not have a fair degree of tech skill, both when it comes to understanding computers particularly manual driver installation and USB-based communications and the itself. First and foremost: The mini vci cable worked perfectly well for me on a 2017 Sienna SE, using the current release as of the date of this post , based on a Lenovo ThinkPad T500 running Windows 7 Pro 64-bit. PLEASE NOTE: The instructions below are based on a 64-bit OS. THE PROCESS FOR A 32-BIT SYSTEM WILL BE DIFFERENT. I guarantee it will fail. Also, my antivirus software ESET Smart Security threw a fit about several files on the CD being contaminated with a trojan. Google search is your friend! I will add that, after manually unpacking and installing the device driver, I had no other problems and no sign of virus or trojan infection. Start by installing whatever version of Toyota TechStream you plan to use. Plenty of info on the Internet to help you out with that. Open a command prompt window and change to said temporary directory. Extract the contents of the. Close your command prompt window. Plug your Mini VCI cable into a USB port. Ignore any such errors for the moment. Open Device Manager and locate the failed item in the hardware list. It should be easy to spot, as it will have a yellow exclamation point overlaying it. Note that you will likely need to do this twice, once for the VCI chip itself and once for the USB-to-serial-port translation. Point the second prompt at the same folder. Once the process finishes, you should see the two new devices in your hardware list. In order for TechStream to recognize and use the Mini-VCI cable, you will need to add a registry tweak.
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