Jp1082 No 030818 Usb Lan Driver Direct
This is a guide to locating, installing, and troubleshooting the USB LAN / Ethernet driver for a device labeled JP1082 No 030818.
Important note: JP1082 No 030818 appears to be a PCB assembly or factory batch number, not a standard consumer model number. It is most commonly found on generic USB 2.0 to Ethernet adapters (often using chipsets like AX88772, SR9800, or RTL8152).
6. Linux / macOS
- Linux (most distros): Works out-of-box with
asixorsr9800kernel modules. Runlsusbto confirm. - macOS: Needs driver if not native. ASIX provides macOS drivers on their site.
Security and maintenance
- Obtain drivers only from reputable sources (vendor website or official package repositories).
- Keep drivers updated for performance and security fixes; avoid unsigned or unverified third-party binaries.
- On Windows, prefer signed drivers; on Linux, prefer in-kernel drivers or vendor source that compiles against your kernel.
- If a driver requires kernel module insertion, verify source integrity and review community reports for vulnerabilities.
Tech Support: How to Install the JP1082 (No. 030818) USB LAN Driver
If you have found this post, you are likely holding a USB-to-LAN adapter with a label reading "JP1082" and "No 030818", and you are frustrated because your computer won't recognize it. jp1082 no 030818 usb lan driver
These adapters were extremely common "no-name" gadgets sold online several years ago. Because they use a specific, older chipset, modern versions of Windows (10 and 11) often do not install a driver for them automatically.
Here is a guide to identifying the hardware and getting it running. This is a guide to locating, installing, and
How to Backup Your Existing USB LAN Driver
To avoid losing the driver for “jp1082 no 030818”:
- Open PowerShell as Administrator.
- Run:
Export-WindowsDriver -Online -Destination D:\DriverBackup - Replace
D:\DriverBackupwith your USB drive path. - This saves all third-party drivers, including your LAN adapter.
Alternatively, use Double Driver (freeware) to export the specific .inf and .sys files. Linux (most distros): Works out-of-box with asix or
Q2: Why does my JP1082 adapter get hot?
A: Normal for 100 Mbps USB 2.0 adapters. If too hot, unplug – it may be faulty.
Q3: Can I use this adapter for gaming?
A: Yes, but latency is slightly higher than built-in Ethernet. It’s fine for casual gaming.
Interpreting the identifier
- jp1082 — Likely a vendor or product code string embedded in a device’s label or firmware. It may be a shorthand used by a manufacturer, a project name, or part of a chipset model.
- no 030818 — Appears to be a serial number, production batch, or date code (e.g., 03‑08‑18 or 2018‑03‑08), which can help identify manufacturing lot or firmware revision.
- Together, the string probably comes from device packaging, firmware info shown by a diagnostic utility, or a label printed on the PCB; it is not in the standard USB Vendor ID/Product ID (VID:PID) format.
