The PuTTY Configuration window will appear, defaulting to "SSH" settings. You can run PuTTY by typing "Putty" in Cortana, and then selecting the "PuTTY Desktop app" icon that should appear. One of those ports, COM4 or COM5 or whichever appears for you, will work for serial connection purposes with PuTTY, or other terminal emulators. It could be COM4 and COM5, specifically "Silicon Labs Dual CP210x USB to UART Bridge: Standard COM Port (COM4)", and the same for COM5. Then, plug in the USB console cable and additional ports will appear. Open "Ports (COM & LPT)" and you may see some ports already (what you will see depends on your PC's configuration). The Device Manager will display a tree of devices on your PC. In Windows 10, before you insert the USB console cable, you can open the "Device Manager" to see the available COM ports (type "Device Manager" into the Cortana field). A free alternative, and arguably simpler to use, is PuTTY, which shall be described below.Įither tool, and others like them, will connect to a COM port.
HyperTerminal is licenced software ($65), so that may not be what you want. Windows used to be shipped with HyperTerminal, so many people are accustomed to using that as a console client.
The two main aspects to think about when using Windows as a client for a console connection via the mini-USB cable are determining which COM port to connect to, and which terminal emulation software to use. The blue mini-USB console cable that is included with the IR829 (and other 800 series devices) connects the mini-USB console port, under the screwed down plate, to a USB port on your PC.