Before downloading anything, you identify the specific model or, more importantly, the chipset inside your Jinco adapter. The brand name "Jinco" is often a rebrand; the actual hardware is made by a third-party chip manufacturer.
Click the button, right-click on Computer , and select Manage . Click on Device Manager in the left-hand menu.
On a forum, an old thread glowed with helpfulness. A user named “w10‑nomad” wrote about having the exact adapter and the same laptop, and linked a driver package that others had confirmed. The download page looked like something from an earlier web: plain text, a dated copyright line, and a single green button. Jinco checked the file’s name and size, compared its checksum with what others reported, and felt the familiar quiet confidence of someone who'd learned to be cautious without being fearful.
Since Jinco lacks a central support portal, the drivers are spread across various third-party websites. The most reliable sources, based on user reports and driver databases, are detailed below.
Since official Jinco download portals are often offline, identifying the internal chipset is the most reliable way to find a working Windows 7 driver. Step 1: Find the Hardware ID Plug the Jinco USB adapter into your Windows 7 computer.

