Motorola Cm140 | Programming Software Download

Here’s an interesting, slightly narrative-style review of the hunt for . "Unlocking the Enigma: A Quest for the Motorola CM140 Programming Software" If you’ve ever held a Motorola CM140, you know it’s not just a radio—it’s a brick of industrial-grade stubbornness. Built like a tank, sounds like a drill sergeant, and about as user-friendly as a safe without a combination. To truly make it yours (program channels, squelch, tones), you need the software. And that’s where the rabbit hole begins.

Search for “CM140 CPS R05.06” + “RIBless cable driver fix” before you start. And maybe light a candle for your serial port. motorola cm140 programming software download

The isn’t just a download; it’s a rite of passage. If you enjoy digital archaeology, mild legal gray areas, and the satisfaction of making a stubborn radio sing—go for it. If you want plug-and-play, buy a Baofeng. But for the CM140? You’ll feel like a radio warlock every time you click “Write to Device.” To truly make it yours (program channels, squelch,

Officially, it’s part of Motorola’s Commercial Series CPS (Customer Programming Software) , specifically for the CM140/CM160 models. Unofficially? It’s a ghost. Downloading It: A Spy Novel in Three Acts Act 1: The Official Route (Spoiler: Paywall & Pain) Motorola doesn’t want you downloading this casually. You need a business account, a dealership agreement, and possibly a blood sample. The software is locked behind a $300+ subscription to Motorola Online . For a hobbyist? That’s a hard “no.” So you close that tab and enter the grey zone. And maybe light a candle for your serial port

Would I download it again? Yes. Would I recommend it to my worst enemy? Only if I wanted them to learn what “hex editing a .dll” means.

You’ll find yourself on radioreference.com, mods.dk, or a Ukrainian radio forum from 2012. Thread titles like “CM140 CPS v05.06 – link?” with replies like “PM sent” (but your inbox stays empty). You’ll sift through dead MediaFire links, password-protected RAR files named “MOTO_CPS_FINAL.exe” (that your antivirus screams about), and one hero who uploaded it to a now-defunct Geocities mirror.

On Nicolaus Copernicus University web pages „cookies” are used. On use of cookies read in Privacy policy.
Cookies settings
On Nicolaus Copernicus Pages "cookies" are used in accord with our Privacy policy. We use "cookies" to improve functionality of our web page. Collected data are anonymized and are used to statistic and analytic purposes, for better adjusting content to user preferences and increase of quality. To approach this goal we use Google Analytics, CUX i Facebook Pixel to. Below we give you the ability of turning on/off this tools.
  on/off
Google Analitics

We use analytic tool Google Analytics, which give us information about user visits on our service (visited pages, navigation path, time of visit)

CUX

We use analytic tool CUX to regisiter visits on NCU News.

Facebook Pixel

We use marketing tool Facebook Pixel, to collect information about user visits and viewed pages.