johnsimion
New member
I have been using Sena SMH5s as an intercom with my wife. I had some problems using the Sena Device Manager before, but eventually broke through and got them set up properly. That set worked great except for short battery life. Well, I thought, why not just buy a second identical set that I could just snap into place when the battery gets low on the first set? So I did, but never bothered to go through the Sena Device Manager. Unfortunately the second set produced poor sound quality and echos, so this morning I thought I'd better update the firmware and make sure the settings were the same on both sets.
Sena has a new version of the Device Manager, which I installed. Now it won't recognize ANY of the SMH5s. This, of course, means that I can't do anything with them - can't update the firmware and can't change the settings on ANY of the four. I tried very hard to troubleshoot this. It was pointed out on YouTube that it takes the special USB cable that Sena provides in order to do this. Fine, I try that. No difference. In YouTube, I found that there is a USB Checker hidden among the program files for the Sena Device Manager. Well, I used that and it says the USB connection is fine. Another hint on YouTube says to uninstall the Sena Device Manager and reinstall it as "admin." Fine, I did that. No change. Next, YouTube tells you to look in the Windows Device Manager and find the Sena. I did, and there was a cute little Windows "exclamation mark" on it, telling me that the drivers were UNSIGNED. Go ahead, try using Sena's own driver installer (also hidden in the program files). No change. I also had Windows check for the latest driver - Windows indeed says I have the latest driver, thank you very much, but Windows won't recognize it because it's UNSIGNED. There is no fix for this - a Google search does not turn up any other source for SIGNED Sena drivers.
I spent another hour trying to figure out how to bypass all the "security" in Windows 10 so I could install UNSIGNED drivers but I lack the computer skills to outwit Windows. There are two levels that both have to be turned off in order to do this and I'm not going to screw up my entire computer because Sena doesn't bother to provide SIGNED drivers. It's not like this is unknown to them. There is actually a post by another user on the Sena web site who faced the same issue; unfortunately his tactic for defeating Windows didn't work for me and I am tired of wasting my day and making myself angry. It totally flabbergasts me that a major company like this cannot even provide a simple thing like SIGNED drivers for its program. It's not like Windows 10 is new any more.
At this point I regret both my purchases. I guess I will have to look for another brand of communicators that isn't so sloppy and uncaring about its customers.
Sena has a new version of the Device Manager, which I installed. Now it won't recognize ANY of the SMH5s. This, of course, means that I can't do anything with them - can't update the firmware and can't change the settings on ANY of the four. I tried very hard to troubleshoot this. It was pointed out on YouTube that it takes the special USB cable that Sena provides in order to do this. Fine, I try that. No difference. In YouTube, I found that there is a USB Checker hidden among the program files for the Sena Device Manager. Well, I used that and it says the USB connection is fine. Another hint on YouTube says to uninstall the Sena Device Manager and reinstall it as "admin." Fine, I did that. No change. Next, YouTube tells you to look in the Windows Device Manager and find the Sena. I did, and there was a cute little Windows "exclamation mark" on it, telling me that the drivers were UNSIGNED. Go ahead, try using Sena's own driver installer (also hidden in the program files). No change. I also had Windows check for the latest driver - Windows indeed says I have the latest driver, thank you very much, but Windows won't recognize it because it's UNSIGNED. There is no fix for this - a Google search does not turn up any other source for SIGNED Sena drivers.
I spent another hour trying to figure out how to bypass all the "security" in Windows 10 so I could install UNSIGNED drivers but I lack the computer skills to outwit Windows. There are two levels that both have to be turned off in order to do this and I'm not going to screw up my entire computer because Sena doesn't bother to provide SIGNED drivers. It's not like this is unknown to them. There is actually a post by another user on the Sena web site who faced the same issue; unfortunately his tactic for defeating Windows didn't work for me and I am tired of wasting my day and making myself angry. It totally flabbergasts me that a major company like this cannot even provide a simple thing like SIGNED drivers for its program. It's not like Windows 10 is new any more.
At this point I regret both my purchases. I guess I will have to look for another brand of communicators that isn't so sloppy and uncaring about its customers.
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