- #HP AR5B125 DRIVERS WINDOWS 10 INSTALL#
- #HP AR5B125 DRIVERS WINDOWS 10 UPDATE#
- #HP AR5B125 DRIVERS WINDOWS 10 DRIVER#
- #HP AR5B125 DRIVERS WINDOWS 10 WINDOWS 10#
Wi-Fi adapter: Realtek RTL8723BE 802.11 b/g/n
#HP AR5B125 DRIVERS WINDOWS 10 WINDOWS 10#
OS: Windows 10 (system was first loaded with Windows 8.1 and then upgraded to 10 when I bought it) I've run virus and malware scans and nothing was found.
But after the next Windows update, it stopped working again.
#HP AR5B125 DRIVERS WINDOWS 10 UPDATE#
The problem started after an automatic weekly Windows update and I tried a system restore after that, which worked. I bought this laptop less than 3 months ago and the wi-fi worked fine for the first two months. The only thing that works is shutting down and restarting, up to five times before the wi-fi shows up. I've tried running the Troubleshooter, changing settings in Device Manager, reinstalling the wifi adapter driver, etc. When I go to Network Settings and click on Wi-Fi, nothing happens-it won't even let me choose that option. After I wake up my laptop from sleep mode (or boot it up), sometimes the wi-fi won't connect. Hi-my problem is not slow wi-fi but wi-fi that connects intermittently. If they end up being what anyone needs I will gladly share them. I managed to dig up some beta win10 drivers that cover a whole spectrum of Atheros cards. It had a (QUALCOMM) Atheros AR5007 802.11b/g card in it. Now, my problem, again, was with an HP laptop.
#HP AR5B125 DRIVERS WINDOWS 10 DRIVER#
This may not be your issue, but a driver update, regardless, could fix your issue. If you are this may be why you are having slow speeds.ģ) List the above information in this thread. If you get 20/20 successful attempts, you are not losing packets. (You can set this to however many you want, or just remove -n 20 for a standard 4 attempts) (you can ping any site you like,, ,, etc.) the -n 20 tells it to run 20 ping attempts. (easiest way would be to type CMD in the search bar and then press enter) Go to the Details tab then from the drop down menu choose hardware IDs and take note of the IDs listed in there. Go to the Driver tab and take note of the provider, date, and version. Right click on your wireless adapter and choose properties. Type View net in the search bar and select View network connections. This will help us locate newer drivers hopefully, if need be. Here are a few things that can help us assist you ġ) What is the model of wireless card in your computer and what are the current version numbers.
This causes the speed to significantly decrease as only some of the data is getting sent/received and has to be sent/received again until it get through to the host or server. The wireless card's drivers installed with windows 10 were actually an older version number than any of the current windows 8.1 drivers.Įssentially what was happening to me was the wireless was dropping data packets over and over. For me it turned out to be a driver issue. I had an issue with slow wifi on one of my laptops.
#HP AR5B125 DRIVERS WINDOWS 10 INSTALL#
So it might work to update it first then install windows 10? But you can't delete the old one because the version for windows that you are running isn't compatible with it so you end up getting a loop of error messages say you can't install this until you uninstall this one and then you can't uninstall this one because you're using the wrong version of windows and repeat. They do have a killer network manager update on their website but you can't install it on windows 10 without deleting the old one first. I think I'll wait a few months to try windows 10 again.Īlso, from my searching today the wifi bug seem to be effecting most dell computers with the killer network manager. So I went back to 8.1 and all is well again with my wifi. It kept timing out and there was really nothing I could do. Well I tried that and it all when to plan until it wouldn't install the driver. I read on another forum where people were having the same problem to uninstall the network card and then restart and then it will auto detect the network card when you start up and then you reinstall the driver.