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DonKeddick's avatar
DonKeddick
Aspirant
Jan 16, 2021
Solved

R9000 X10 Recommended Wireless AD client adapters ?

Searched the community for any info on which Wireless AD adapters are compatible and/or recommended for use with the R9000 Nighthawk X10 AD7200 WiFi router, but came up empty. Is there a Netgear K...
  • schumaku's avatar
    Jan 19, 2021

    Hello Don,

     


    DonKeddick wrote:

    Is there a Netgear KB for compatible 802.11ad devices for the R9000?


    That's the beauty of wireless standards - even more or less obsolete ones like 802.11AD: There is none required 8-)

     

    You can add the Qualcomm QCA9008 to your list, too.

     

    No practical experience with the older Intel 11xxx/13xxx. The MG360 sounds promising, have never ordered one however.

     

    It was kind of a nice experience using your Dell (QCA9005) and Acer (QCA9008) notebooks with the R9000 - permitting we were seated within the 60 GHz coverage sector. This graphics (I think borrowed from the MG360 marketing materials) does describe things well:

     

     

      

     

    With the factory fitted 802.11ad as well as with some module updates (Tri-Band Wireless-AC 17xxx/18xxx) we've done on some Intel-chipset based Asus noteooks [the crux is to find and install the matching matrix antenna with 60 GHz upconverter module and the additional antenna cable in real-world notebooks]. 

     

    As plemans correctly mentioned - modules are coming in some for 2021 elderly module sizes, even if everything appeared to be right ... we were not able to make these run in some Thinkpad and HP business notebooks.

     

    When it's running - the performance we've seen absolutely stunning!

     

    Real-world experience is that if the cat is walking or sleeping in front of the R9000 or behind the notebook, or a water bottle is placed in the required strict line of sight, the 60 GHz link does go down. All the modded notebooks are updated to Intel AX200 in the meantime, where the R9000 allows PHY link rates in the 1000...1200 Mb/s on 160 MHz bandwidth under less restrictive mobile client positions, and not bringing a lot of heat to behind of the display (some 70...80°C are not uncommon on the upconverter and matrix antennae).  

     

    Have fun experimenting!