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Forum Discussion
Workyard
Feb 17, 2026Aspirant
Netgear MR7400 (M7 Pro) hotspot + Intel BE201 WiFi card
I’m having a strange compatibility issue with a Netgear MR7400 (M7 Pro)-unlocked hotspot and a Windows laptop with an Intel BE201 Wi-Fi 7 card. The laptop can see the 5 GHz and 6 GHz networks but get...
plemans
Feb 17, 2026Guru - Experienced User
So the AX211 sees it eitherway. But the BE201 ONLY sees it in wpa2 mode? It doesn't in wpa3?
If so, I'd be checking with intel as if it was a full hardware failure, it wouldn't see it at all. If it was a security issue, the AX211 shouldn't see it either.
So I'm thinking its something with the settings on the BE201.
Does the hotspot have mixed mode? WPA2/WPA3 mixed mode?
- WorkyardFeb 17, 2026Aspirant
To provide some context: I purchased an MR7400 in January, but it would not connect to the 5GHz or 6GHz bands on my laptop. I assumed the unit was defective and had the seller send a replacement.
With the replacement device, I experienced the exact same issue. To rule out my computer as the cause, Dell replaced the Intel WiFi card in my laptop in case it was faulty. However, the issue still persists.
For reference, I have:
- iPhone 16 Pro
- iPhone 17 Pro
- Samsung Galaxy S25
All three phones connect to WiFi 7 on the MR7400 without any issues.
Additionally, when I use the Samsung Galaxy S25 as a hotspot:
If the hotspot is set to 5GHz, my laptop can see and connect to it.
If I change the hotspot to 6GHz, the Intel WiFi card does not detect the network at all.
Current MR7400 wireless settings that can have a connection:
- 2.4GHz – WPA2/WPA3
- 5GHz – WPA2 only (does not work if set to WPA2/WPA3 or WPA3)
It appears the Intel WiFi card cannot detect or connect to 6GHz networks and also has issues with mixed WPA2/WPA3 security on 5GHz.
Could this be a compatibility issue with the Intel card, a firmware limitation, or a specific router configuration requirement?