Usb Vid-0fe6 Amp-pid-9900 May 2026

USB VID 0FE6 PID 9900 refers to a generic 10/100M Ethernet Adapter often manufactured by or associated with ICS Advent

Symptom C: Blue Screen of Death (BSOD) on Plug-In

In rare cases on older Windows versions (7/8), plugging in the device triggers a DRIVER_IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL or SYSTEM_THREAD_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLED crash. usb vid-0fe6 amp-pid-9900

Common actionable tasks

Common Use: These chips are typically found in inexpensive, unbranded USB Ethernet dongles often used for laptops without a built-in LAN port or for DIY projects like Raspberry Pi networking. Technical Profile USB VID 0FE6 PID 9900 refers to a

For Linux (Ubuntu, Mint, Fedora)

These devices generally have better plug-and-play support on Linux than Windows, but you need the right video software. Go to Device Manager

Linux: The device is generally supported by the sr9700 or dm9601 driver modules. If the adapter is detected but not working, users can often force the driver to recognize the device by adding the VID/PID pair to the driver's ID list via the terminal.

Final recommendation

If you need a reliable USB Ethernet adapter, buy one with a Realtek RTL8153 (Gigabit) or AX88179 chipset instead. The DM9601 is outdated, slow, and problematic on modern OSes. Use this guide only if you already own the adapter and cannot replace it.

  1. Right-click Start > Device Manager.
  2. Expand "Network adapters" or look under "Other devices" for "Unknown device."
  3. Right-click the suspected device > Properties > Details tab.
  4. Under "Property," select "Hardware Ids."
  5. Confirm you see USB\VID_0FE6&PID_9900.