Ezp2023 Vs Ch341a ❲TRUSTED❳
The CH341A is the clear winner for users. The EZP2023 is for those who value time and safety over cost.
So, which one do you need? Let’s put the EZP2023 and the CH341A in the ring. ezp2023 vs ch341a
Flashing a dead Xbox 360 NAND (64MB). CH341A: 4+ hours. EZP2023: 8 minutes. The CH341A is the clear winner for users
The CH341A is a cheap USB interface chip manufactured by WCH (Nanjing Qinheng Microelectronics). It is not a dedicated programmer chip; it is a general-purpose USB-serial/USB-parallel converter. Clever developers realized you can abuse its parallel mode to bit-bang SPI protocols. Let’s put the EZP2023 and the CH341A in the ring
This write-up compares their hardware, software support, real-world performance, and suitability for different users.
| Risk | CH341A | EZP2023 | |-------------------------------|------------------------------------------|-----------------------------| | Overvoltage (3.3V rail) | Common – may exceed 3.6V | Regulated, clean output | | 1.8V chip damage | Very likely without level shifter | Safe – built-in regulator | | Short circuit protection | None | Yes (current limiting) | | Clip flashing (SOIC8 clip) | Unstable if wires >10 cm | Stable up to 30 cm | | USB power droop | Frequent (needs external 5V mod) | Minimal (better decoupling) |
| | CH341A | EZP2023 (clone) | EZP2023+ (official) | |---------------|---------------------------|----------------|---------------------| | | $5–10 USD | $25–35 | $60–80 | | Extras | Often includes SOIC8 clip | Clip, cables | Clip, ZIF, adapters | | Counterfeits | Rare (simple chip) | Common | Few (logo mismatch) |