★★★☆☆ (3.5/5) “Works perfectly after two rituals and a reboot. For a hobbyist, that’s fine. For a professional, buy a modern FTDI chip-based device instead.”

If you see “MxT USB Device” in an unknown state, unplug the device, delete the driver from C:\Windows\System32\drivers\mxtser.sys (if it exists), and start fresh. Windows 11 remembers failed driver states stubbornly. A clean slate fixes 90% of issues.

If you’ve landed on this page, you likely own a piece of niche hardware: a CNC controller, a 3D printer mainboard (like the MakerBase MxT), a specialized industrial sensor, or a knock-off Arduino clone. The "MxT USB Device" driver is the digital handshake that lets Windows 11 talk to these often-forgotten devices.

Open Device Manager > Properties of the MxT device > Port Settings > Advanced > Change "Latency Timer" from 16 ms to 1 ms. Apply. Suddenly, clean data. This setting has nothing to do with baud rate on paper, but in practice, it resets the USB-to-serial state machine. The Bottom Line (Interesting Takeaway) The MxT USB driver on Windows 11 is a time capsule . It’s a piece of 2010-era embedded engineering that survives on Win11 through sheer luck and Microsoft’s commitment to backward compatibility. It’s not polished. It’s not signed beautifully. But once you know the secret handshake (disable Memory Integrity just for install, then re-enable; tweak the latency timer), it becomes rock solid .

Verdict: Works flawlessly, until it doesn’t. Then you’ll question your sanity.

You plug in the device. Device Manager shows "MxT USB Device" with a yellow triangle. Error Code 10: "This device cannot start."

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