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Forum Discussion
mmills79
Aug 22, 2021Aspirant
Model A6210 (AC1200 USB Adapter) Install causes HP printer to fail
8/22/21 - I just recently tried to install the A6210 USB adapter on my HP 2000 Lap Top runnning Window 8.1. The PC has 8GB of RAM and it is 64 bit. All the USB ports are 2.0. The A6210 is supposed to...
mmills79
Aug 23, 2021Aspirant
I have not tried to simply plug and play the A62100.
Should I remove or disable the Linksys first?
I did not understand your comment "and one designed to work with current versions of Windows rather than one from the ark"
are you implying there is something ancient or not up to date with the Netgear driver/install?
Lastly, I went into device manager and checked all the USB drivers down to root hub. Windows tells me the drivers are up to date. Did I do this correctly or is there a better way to do this?
michaelkenward
Aug 23, 2021Guru - Experienced User
mmills79 wrote:
I did not understand your comment "and one designed to work with current versions of Windows rather than one from the ark"
are you implying there is something ancient or not up to date with the Netgear driver/install?
The A6210 is six or seven years old and was designed for older versions of Windows. I'd hope that something you bought today would be a bit more current.
By now the A6210 may be well behind the wifi technology that your router offers.
These USB adapters are low-end widgets that don't get, or even deserve, massive investment in keeping them up to date with whatever Windows throws at us. (Have you looked at the requirements for Windows 11 yet? Are you ready for TPM? Me neither, until I read about it.)
mmills79 wrote:
I have not tried to simply plug and play the A6210.
Should I remove or disable the Linksys first?
Your call. I wouldn't uninstall anything. Simply unplugging the Linksys and plugging in the A6210 should persuade Windows to install its "native" drivers.
mmills79 wrote:
Lastly, I went into device manager and checked all the USB drivers down to root hub. Windows tells me the drivers are up to date. Did I do this correctly or is there a better way to do this?
That is my point. Windows won't find these things.
The best way to do it is to find out who made the motherboard. The visit the support pages for that.
You can even dig deeper by finding out who made the various on-board chips and then seeing if they have updates. Graphics,audio, Ethernet, USB, wifi and so on come from one of the usual suspects. Most time these won't be any great deal, but sometimes they can be the difference between a working device and a crash.
When you roll your own PCs you get into the habit of checking these things.
- mmills79Aug 23, 2021Aspirant
I tried your experiment. I unplugged the Linksys AC1200 and simply plugged in the A6210.
Windows installed it and it worked (without running the Netgear install CD). I'm using it now.
Happily I can also report that the printer also still worked!!!
So, is the smoking gun, the Netgear driver for the A6210?
It seems so to me ......and that it is a reasonable next step for someone at Netgear to look into this.
I hope someone from Netgear is looking at this thread and noting this discussion.
It seems the installation software/driver for the A6210 is flawed.
The only other point I will make is that from a performance perspective, I did not see any advantage of the Netgear over the Linksys. They both had approximately the same through put. The Linksys AC1200 is $10 cheaper.
Does anybody have any experience with the Netgear Night Hawk adapter (AC1900)? Supposedly it is also backwards compatible with Win 8.1 & USB 2.0. Does it really have significantly improved throughput and overall performance (connectivity, range, etc)?
- michaelkenwardAug 24, 2021Guru - Experienced User
mmills79 wrote:
Does anybody have any experience with the Netgear Night Hawk adapter (AC1900)?
There is no such thing.
AC1900 is not a reliable guide to model number. Many devices come with an AC tag, but it is essentially a label that Netgear, and other brands, attach to hardware to describe wifi speeds.
Perhaps you mean the A7000 USB adapter.
As with anything wifi, there are various factors that affect performance. Slightly younger than the A6100, at least the A7000 does not promise to support 20th century operating systems. It also supports Mac OS X, although Netgear seems to be incapable of producing timely updates for Mac OS. Maybe it is the usual Apple trick of blocking off third party brands from its world.