![]() The most common reason for this process above to not work is when your Windows PC joins with Airconsole via the LE enumerator. double click and view the property sheet - in this example the COM port is COM33 Open the Devices & Printers window in Windows Explorer and locate the paired Airconsole. Determining correct COM port to connect to WRONG stack - solution - unpair the device and start againĬorrect stack - COM ports should be createdĤ. How can I tell if I paired with the LE vs EDR enumerator? Anything else if likely a different Bluetooth stackģ. In the Device Manager (see screenshot above) look for the words "Microsoft Bluetooth Enumerator". How to determine if I am running the Microsoft stack? If you see two enumerators (Microsoft Bluetooth Enumerator and Microsoft Bluetooth LE Enumerator) then you are running dual-mode stack. The definitive way is to view Device Manager and open the Bluetooth node. The simplest way to determine this is if you see two entries for the same Airconsole in the Bluetooth device list. How to determine if I am running a dual stack? To troubleshoot further you can open Device Manager to see exactly what is going onġ. ![]() * If your Windows PC is part of a domain you may have trouble installing COM ports and require help from your network administrator (group policy can prevent the install of COM ports) * Airconsole is only tested to work with the Microsoft Bluetooth stack (although may work with others) * The updated Bluetooth stacks on Windows 8.1 and above support Bluetooth in dual-mode using two enumerators this can cause confusion as the Airconsole will appear twice in the device list! Make sure you pair with the EDR enumerator and not the LE enumerator as the LE version will not work (no serial ports will be created) See the linked video for details on setting up (pairing) and using Airconsole via Bluetooth on Windows ![]()
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