If you are a mobile technician or someone who frequently flashes Android devices, you are likely familiar with Miracle Box (or Miracle Thunder). However, getting the drivers installed correctly on a modern 64-bit Windows system (specifically Windows 8, 10, or 11) is often a headache.
Technicians frequently face the dreaded "Device not detected" error or "Windows encountered a problem installing the driver." This guide walks you through the correct installation process and how to bypass Windows security features that block the drivers.
Use when: You have the original 64-bit driver from Windows 7/8.0, but Windows 10 refuses to install due to "Third-party INF does not contain digital signature information."
Install the legacy driver:
Make it semi-permanent (won't survive every reboot but useful):
Pro tip: If the driver unloads after reboot, use Driver Signature Enforcement Overrider (DSEO) or EasyBCD to enable test signing mode permanently (bcdedit /set testsigning on). You’ll see a "Test Mode" watermark, but the miracle driver will work.
Miracle Driver (also called Miracle Box USB driver or MTK USB VCOM driver) is required to connect certain Android/MTK devices to Windows for flashing, unlocking, or using Miracle Box software. This guide shows a safe, repeatable process for installing Miracle drivers on Windows 8 and Windows 10 (64-bit). miracle driver installation windows 8-10-64bit
Before you begin
What you'll need
Step 1 — Prepare Windows for unsigned drivers (Windows 10 & 8, 64-bit) Windows 8/10 64-bit enforce driver signature verification. If the driver is unsigned, temporarily disable signature enforcement:
Option A — Temporary method (reverts after reboot)
Option B — Permanent (not recommended for security)
Step 2 — Extract driver package
Step 3 — Install the driver via Device Manager
Step 4 — Verify installation
Step 5 — Install Miracle Box software and test
Troubleshooting
Safety notes
Quick checklist
If you want, I can produce:
Run Command Prompt as Administrator and enter:
bcdedit /set testsigning on
Restart. You’ll see “Test Mode” watermark – safe for driver installation but revert with bcdedit /set testsigning off.
For Windows 10 & 11:
For Windows 8:
Once the signature enforcement is disabled, you can proceed with the actual installation. If you are a mobile technician or someone
If you own a Miracle TV box (e.g., M8S, M9, MXQ), a Miracle USB capture device, or a Miracle-branded display adapter, getting the right driver installed on 64-bit Windows 8, 10, or 11 can be challenging. This is primarily due to Microsoft’s Driver Signature Enforcement and the fact that many Miracle drivers are not digitally signed for modern OS versions.
This guide provides a proper, step-by-step method to install Miracle drivers successfully.