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Forum Discussion
j-ewing-ar
Mar 18, 2020Tutor
With Window 10 auto-connect to orbi, no wifi seen after reboot at other locations
(Problem and a Circumvention , to save someone else a month of trial & error) ISSUE: On Windows 10 (@ Feature level 1909 w Cumulative updates up to 2020-03) on a laptop (lenovo Thinkpad E570, Intel...
j-ewing-ar
Mar 31, 2020Tutor
Definitely was a normal shutdown and power off of the laptop, not hibernation or sleeping.state.
With dual-boot I never know for sure whether I might want Win 10 or Linux next time. I tend to use Linux more and at least in the past Linux handling of hibernation/sleeping state was problematic, so I have long been in the habit of doing a normal shutdown and powerdown before putting the laptop away.
The problem occurred on 3 different days while I was trying out various solutions, thinking it was fixed and finding out not, before finally hitting on a combination that has so far worked every time since.
FURRYe38
Mar 31, 2020Guru - Experienced User
Make sure your laptops wifi drivers are up to date.
I have no problems with my Windows 10 work laptop connecting to Orbi with Auto-reconnect enabled. However the LT isn't dual boot.
- tomschmidtMar 31, 2020Virtuoso
I agree that this has to be an issue with your laptop. I have multiple Windows laptops and have no issues connecting to WiFi on my homes Orbi and other WiFi hotspots.
I suggest uninstalling the WiFi drivers on your Windows 10 and then reinstalling them. If you continue to have issues, then I suggest going to a Windows 10 or Lenovo web forum for support.
- j-ewing-arMar 31, 2020Tutor
I think more likely specifically an issue with the Windows 10 drivers for the Intel Dual Band Wireless-AC 8265 WiFi Network Adapter on my laptop. Suspect your laptops may use different WiFi network adapter (identifiable via Device Manager). First thought was need for a WiFi driver update. There was one (Intel 20.70.16.4 1/1/2020), installed it, no difference.
One of the suggesstions I found online for getting out of the situation was to deinstall the WiFi network adapter (didn't mention any thing about re-install, figured device detection would trigger that). Tried deinstall. Deinstall never completed. After 30 minutes, tried to shutdown Win10. That hung. Brute force hardware power off. Next reboot, Win 10 came back up, WiFi didn't auto-connect to home (Omni) network and now saw all the other networks. Figured it was fixed, but after using home Omni network, next time booted at a non-home location, same problelm -- no networks seen. Apparently the only useful thing the hung uninstall did was to disable auto-connect to the home network.
Still occasionally getting device driver updates from Lenovo. Maybe that will eventually fix the issue. Perhaps a network adapter de-install would work differently with the later drivers in place and shake something loose, but I'm reluctant to disturb things now that I know how to get WiFi to work consistently.
- FURRYe38Mar 31, 2020Guru - Experienced User
I would suggest when you get time, remove ALL wifi drivers from the PC. Be sure you have the most current version of drivers.zip on your PC. After the drivers are fully removed, reboot your PC, then install the drivers. I would do one more reboot of the PC after the drivers are installed then configure the wifi adapter to connect. Seems like something on your PC isn't happy.