Intel ax200 on Acer Aspire 7 A715-71G-546G (i5-7300HQ, 1050)

Corgano
Corgano Member Posts: 11

Tinkerer

edited November 2023 in 2019 Archives
I recently got an intel ax200 wifi + bluetooth 5.0 adaptor for my laptop notably because the bluetooth performance on my laptop was pathetically slow - pairing a ps4 controller took 3 or 4 tries with how long it took my laptop to recognize it, past laptops this was almost instant between 2-5 seconds. After installing the new ax200 unit i found my wifi works perfectly fine. However the bluetooth device doesn't appear in device manager. Any ideas?

Answers

  • brummyfan2
    brummyfan2 ACE Posts: 28,086 Trailblazer
    edited December 2019
    Hi,
    Could you please check the driver version for the AX200 in Device manager under Network adapters, in Device manager, expand Network adapters, right click Intel AX200, select Properties and go to Driver tab to find the Driver version.
    You could also go to Settings-> Devices and check whether Bluetooth is switched on.

  • Corgano
    Corgano Member Posts: 11

    Tinkerer

    edited December 2019
    B. Bluetooth is impossible to turn on if windows doesn't think you have a bluetooth device
    A. 21.50.0, the newest drivers available for the ax200 bluetooth. The drivers are installed, but it doesn't look like it sees the bluetooth device to drive.
  • Corgano
    Corgano Member Posts: 11

    Tinkerer

    Laptop model is actually a A715-71G-57JW
    i5-7300HQ with HM175 chipset. Came with a Qualcomm Atheros QCA61x4 adapter

    doing a bit of research, I found the ax200 uses a pcie interface for the wifi and a usb interface for the bluetooth, all provided by the m.2 socket. My working theory is that the socket on the motherboard doesn't have the usb bits. I could google the QCA61x4 and see what it uses, but i'm having a hard time figuring out what interfaces it uses exactly. Any ideas?
  • Corgano
    Corgano Member Posts: 11

    Tinkerer

    Edit: Original chip is a Qualcomm qcnfa344a
  • Hi,
    I think the socket is compatible with the card.

  • Corgano
    Corgano Member Posts: 11

    Tinkerer

    This fix worked for me
    https://community.acer.com/en/discussion/549994/intel-9260ngw-bluetooth
    Taping over these two pins (wifi disable pins) keeps the system from disabling the card, forcing it on.

    This may have unintended side effects, there was some reason WHY the system was disabling it. MAybe it was a good reason? Maybe it was hard coded to a specific card. Maybe it was trying to protect itself from a card it knew was bad. By taping over the contacts you take away the systems ability to disable it, so it can have unintended side effects. IT's not likely, but still could fry your system. You have been warned.

    As for me, everything seems to work fantastically so far.