Hello,

I am.

I am also waiting on a USB Host chip to be able to directly plug in to an 
Arduino, etc.  I will post when I get an update.
I’ve also opened my unit to see the chip and was going to bypass it; however, I 
thought it would be much cooler to run unmodified which is why I am going to 
run through a Arduino/ESP8266/ESP32.

I can post either/all above info as I find it if anyone is interested.

As for your direct question, you need to install Windows 11 drivers in order to 
directly communicate with the PL2303.

Issue:
PL2303TA DO NOT SUPPORT WINDOWS 11 OR LATER, PLEASE CONTACT YOUR SUPPLIER.
Goto this link to find info:
https://embetronicx.com/uncategorized/fixed-prolific-pl2303ta-usb-to-serial-and-windows-11/

The file you need is:
PL2303_Prolific_DriverInstaller_v1_12_0.zip

Once installed, you can then use the method described earlier in this thread as 
if using a Win10 machine.

Michail Wilson
206-920-6312

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of 
Robert L
Sent: Tuesday, January 6, 2026 3:58 PM
To: neonixie-l <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [neonixie-l] Surplus POS VFD displays

Hi Tom (or anyone else!),

Are you running one of the ELO VFD displays under Windows 11? I've not found my 
way past the  "PL2303TA DO NOT SUPPORT WINDOWS 11..."message under Ports in 
device manager.

Suggestions welcome!

Happy New Year everyone!

Bob

On Thursday, December 25, 2025 at 9:28:01 AM UTC-8 Tom Katt wrote:
On Thursday, December 25, 2025 at 12:36:30 AM UTC-5 Michail Wilson wrote:

I bought three of them.  All arrived quickly and all brand new with plastic 
cover.



I didn’t want to try to find a Win10 PC, so I did it on my Win11 Laptop after a 
change.

I am going to work on figuring out how to run it with a controller if possible 
to take out the PC requirement.  Love the display.



Has anyone opened it?  If so, how?

Just as a quick note - I don't believe there is really much of any OS 
requirements...  As long as the host understands the usb serial port protocol, 
it should work.  No problem with Win11 or Linux from what I can see on my Rasp 
Pi.

 I haven't tried cracking mine open yet...  They almost look like they are 
glued during assembly like modern day smartphones - if that's the case you'd 
need some heat and suction cup pullers like you find in a gadget toolkit set.  
Gotta love today's non-repair world - if it breaks just toss it and buy a new 
one I guess.   But I would start with seeing if there's any hint working 
through the base - once you pull that off you're at the back hinge cover and 
perhaps there is some fastener behind it that is the secret.  These would 
certainly make great displays for microcontroller projects if you could get to 
the serial pins.
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