Vertex Vx351 Programming Software Work Official

Assuming you have CE115 installed and your cable drivers loaded, here is the actual process to read and write the radio.

Step 1: Power Off the Radio Do not attempt to program with the radio turned on. The VX-351 goes into "Clone Mode" automatically when voltage is applied to the programming port.

Step 2: Connect the Cable Attach the CT-104 plug to the radio’s side port (the large rubber cover). Screw it in tight—it needs ground contact.

Step 3: Launch CE115 Open the software. You will see a blank grid.

Step 4: Configure COM Port

Step 5: Read the Radio

Step 6: Editing the Codeplug Now the fun part. You will see a tree menu: vertex vx351 programming software work

Step 7: Writing Back to the Radio


Vertex Standard (now owned by Motorola Solutions) does not generally distribute this software freely to end-users. It is "Dealer Only" software. You have three legal options:

At 2:15 AM, Carol returned with a fresh pot of coffee. Jake handed her a laminated cheat sheet he’d printed from the software’s Report Generator—a rarely-used feature that spits out a beautiful, organized list of every channel, frequency, tone, and power setting.

“Test them,” Jake said, yawning.

Carol grabbed a VX-351, keyed up Channel 1. “Security, this is Carol, radio check.”

A clear voice came back: “Loud and clear, boss. No interference.” Assuming you have CE115 installed and your cable

Channel 2. “Floor supervisors, radio check.”

“Copy. Maria is on 4, and we’re not hearing her anymore.”

Channel 4. “Kitchen, this is Carol, how’s the pie?”

The kitchen manager’s voice boomed back, slightly compressed but crisp: “Pie is hot, radio is perfect. What did Jake do, perform surgery on these things?”

Jake smiled. The Vertex VX-351 programming software wasn't glamorous. It didn't have drag-and-drop graphics, cloud sync, or AI. It was a utilitarian, unforgiving, spreadsheet-driven tool that demanded patience, a working serial port, and the wisdom to know that a 25kHz channel width will always bleed into a 12.5kHz neighbor if you don’t respect the laws of physics.

He closed the laptop. The software’s last action was to save the codeplug as a .vxf file—a 64-kilobyte masterpiece of engineering. He named it GoldRush_2025_Working.vxf and backed it up to three places: the Toughbook’s SSD, a USB stick in his go-bag, and an old FTP server in his garage. Step 5: Read the Radio

As he packed up, a janitor walked by with a VX-351 on his belt. The radio was silent. No bleed-over. No squelch bursts. Just clean, open air.

That was the real work of the Vertex VX-351 programming software: not writing data, but writing order into chaos. And at 3:00 AM, with a casino running smoothly and fifty radios singing in perfect harmony, Jake Morrison finally felt the weight lift off his shoulders.

He drove home in silence, the only frequency that mattered being the one in his own tired head—the one that said, “Job done.”

This paper covers the necessary environment, software setup, typical programming workflow, and common troubleshooting points for the Vertex Standard VX-351 (a commercial-grade portable radio).


Getting the software to work requires more than just clicking "Install." Here is the sequential workflow that guarantees success.

  • Set optional features (via Common or Optional Features tab):
  • Write to radio – Click Write (F5) ; keep radio powered on and cable secure.