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andrisalex's avatar
andrisalex
Follower
Jul 28, 2018
Solved

A6210 disconnecting, not recognising usb3 and crashing windows explorer

Hi. This apdater has been a pain in the back for a while now, but after recently i updated the driver it became even worse. It takes forever to find wifi, disconnects all the time, doesn't recognise it is in USB 3 port and crashes explorer.exe all the time, which makes me restart PC over and over....i run windows 7 ultimate 62bit. Any help would be great, since i don't seem to find a solution from old posts.

3 Replies

    • Blanca_O's avatar
      Blanca_O
      NETGEAR Employee Retired

      Hi andrisalex, 

       

      We’d greatly appreciate hearing your feedback letting us know if you need further assistance.

       

      Regards, 
      Blanca 
      Community Team

  • I ran into frequent disconnecting problems with this device while I was playing Overwatch or just browsing the Internet.  I thought that the device was defective and almost returned it.  Instead of returning, I decided to perform some testing on this device and post what I did to keep it from disconnecting.

     

    The motherboard I used to perform this test is this one:

    https://www.gigabyte.com/us/Motherboard/GA-Z77-D3H-rev-10

     

    I installed the manufacturer's chipset and USB 3.0 driver and not the driver from Intel, even if it appears to be outdated.  Sometimes, people like to use the website's untested version and it may cause the Southbridge devices to not register or create conflicting information with some hardware.  We must understand that it is tested to work with Windows 10 (in my case).

     

    I am on the most current build of Windows 10 to include have the latest driver to the A6210, which is ver 1.0.0.39.  You should see Win 10 32/64 bits driver version: 5.1.35.0 in the Driver tab or as in Example 1.

    Example 1: Driver Version

    Resolution:

     

    On the Advanced tab, I only modified two items:

    Bluetooth Collaboration: Disable

    BT-AMP: Disabled

     

    I also ensured that leftover drivers are removed.  This is a common problem that most people will not perform.  

    In the Device Manager, at the top, select View and then Show Hidden Devices.

     

    Notice that in Example 2 that I have two ghost devices with their drivers still remaining on the machine.  Only look for the network adapters like the ones that I highlighted.  Do not remove anything else as it's needed by Windows 10.

     

     

    Reboot the machine after removing these to ensure Windows 10 will finish cleaning up the leftover drivers.

    I performed these steps and did not have another disconnecting issue, but I would suspect that there is a conflict with Bluetooth being enabled.