NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.
Forum Discussion
omnescient
Jan 09, 2015Aspirant
A6210 operating @ High Speed (USB 2.0)
I've installed A6210 using the standalone Windows 7 driver, and on every boot I receive the W7 message informing me that the device will perform faster when using a SuperSpeed (USB 3.0) port. It i...
- Oct 09, 2015
Hi JamesGL,
I guess this will not help ltj, he most likely doesn't have a problem with A6210 and Windows 10.
His problem - and that of many other customers including me - more likely is the following:
The A6210 works. But only at USB 2.0 speed. Even at USB 3.0 ports.
I will repeat this, just to make the problem clear, once and forever :smileywink:
When using the Netgear driver and plugging the A6210 into USB 3.0 ports
... the A6210 does not connect and work at USB 3.0 SuperSpeed
... it only connects and works at USB 2.0 High-Speed
We purchased an USB 3.0 device. It is advertised as "faster access with USB 3.0". We install the driver. We plug this piece of hardware into an USB 3.0 port. It only works as an USB 2.0 device. The free Tool "USB Device Tree Viewer" confirms this. USB 2.0 speed only. The achieved transfer rates are way too low. As an USB 3.0 device, the A6210 should do much better.
That's the topic of this thread: USB 2.0 speed at USB 3.0 ports.
Luckily, this seems not to be a fundamental hardware problem, but a software / driver problem.
Solution: (that at least worked for me)
- install the standalone version of the Netgear A6210 driver
- stop and disable the Windows service "NetgearSwitchUSB", which is installed and started by the installer
- unplug the A6210
- wait a moment
- reconnect the A6210 to the same USB port.
The A6210 should now be recognized correctly as an USB 3.0 device and will work at SuperSpeed. Hurray!
The service "NetgearSwitchUSB" somehow switches the A6210 via software from USB 3.0 to USB 2.0. If the service is active and you look at the "USB Device Tree Viewer" while plugging the A6210 in, you can see the A6210 shortly and correctly as an USB 3.0 device. But after a second, it disappears and comes back as an USB 2.0 device. Disabling the service prevents this.
How to disable the service (Windows 7):
- Open the Control Panel, click on "System and Security", then "Administrative Tools", then "Services".
- In the list, locate "NetgearSwitchUSB", right click on it, select "Properties"
- Click on the "Stop" button and wait a few seconds
- Click on the drop down menu next to "Startup type" and select "Disabled"
- Click on the "Apply" button
- Click "OK"
- done
I use the A6210 for many month now at USB 3.0 speed without that service active, so it seems not to be mandantory for proper functionality.
Hope that helps.
Bye,
a guy from Germany.
billcrowley
Feb 27, 2015Guide
SNYPER_ wrote: bump above post^
I tried using the media tek drivers but couldn't get them to work...I have the A6200 but did try to use both the mediatek drivers for the 6200 and 6210. my 6200 worked fine on win7 on the USB 3.0 but don't work well at all with 8.1.
I did find this info though...go into device manager and under the universal serial bus controllers you will see the TI extensible host controller for USB3.0. This is the one that is failing. Sometimes I can disable it and renable and the adapter working again. Apparently this is a known problem (see link below) and as best I can tell the computer mfg needs to provide updated drivers for the USB3.0. I don't know if that is true or not but I have not been able to find new drivers for my Dell so I can't test it out.
http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows8_1-hardware/texas-intruments-usb-30-extensible-host-controller/39f2ed24-785b-43f6-ae81-2272eea516bb
http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows8_1-hardware/chronic-usb-30-port-problems/98cfc63c-9ce0-4801-8520-612a858c21ec