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- HP ENVY 17 J102 EA Wifi Bluetooth combo card upgrade to 5ghz

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02-18-2024 08:17 AM - edited 02-18-2024 08:19 AM
My first post looking for a suitable wifi Bluetooth card to put in my HP ENVY 17 J102 EA. I am currently using a TP-Link AC600 Nano Wi-Fi Bluetooth 4.2 USB Adapter that sorted my Bluetooth issue https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/182674980222 would this one be correct? current one is a Manufacturer: Ralink Technology, Corp. Description: Ralink RT3290 802.11bgn Wi-Fi Adapter Driver version: 5.0.57.1 basically I would like my USB port functionality back and would prefer an onboard 5ghz card I have read a few posts seems possible wish to check available options before purchase I have also put in two Samsung evo SSD 4TB in total 16gb ram upgraded CPU Intel® Core™ i7-4910MQ Processor (8M Cache- up to 3.90 GHz) thanks in advance for any further information kind regards Mark.
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02-18-2024 08:29 AM
Yes, that model card should work fine.
However, there are no W10 Bluetooth drivers for the card available anymore from HP, or Intel.
I saved the drivers a while ago before Intel removed them because I have the same card that I installed in my HP 350 G1 notebook.
Download, unzip and run the Bluetooth driver in the Intel 7260AC WiFi & Bluetooth Drivers.zip file.
W10 will install the Wi-Fi driver, but the one in my folder is newer as both of these drivers were the last ones Intel released before they retired support for the card.
02-18-2024 08:29 AM
Yes, that model card should work fine.
However, there are no W10 Bluetooth drivers for the card available anymore from HP, or Intel.
I saved the drivers a while ago before Intel removed them because I have the same card that I installed in my HP 350 G1 notebook.
Download, unzip and run the Bluetooth driver in the Intel 7260AC WiFi & Bluetooth Drivers.zip file.
W10 will install the Wi-Fi driver, but the one in my folder is newer as both of these drivers were the last ones Intel released before they retired support for the card.
02-18-2024 09:21 AM
You're very welcome, Mark.
At the time, there was the Intel 7260 AC card and the Broadcom BCM4352 AC card which has the same specs as the Intel card.
Now they do make some hybrid cards with newer wireless chips on them, and they should work, but I cannot 100% guarantee it.
I would love to experiment with one, but I really don't use my old 350 G1 notebook very much anymore. It is a spare to a spare to a spare.
02-18-2024 09:32 AM - edited 02-18-2024 09:35 AM
Excellent, Mark.
That model card will update your notebook's wireless to Wi-Fi 6E standards.
Looking forward to reading about your notebook's Wi-Fi card upgrade project.
Cheers,
Paul
02-19-2024 08:30 AM - edited 02-19-2024 09:08 AM
Great news Paul ordered yesterday arrived today, and practically installed itself lol card took a minute to change, and then the intel driver & support assistant kicked in immediately with the new drivers and a further set all appears well I am now 5 & 6g capable and have a great functionality of Bluetooth latency has improved now audio sync is on point plus have my port back my ten-year-old laptop and myself thank you kind regards Mark.
SSID: Skynet Global Defence Network
Protocol: Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n)
Security type: WPA3-Personal
Network band: 2.4 GHz
Network channel: 1
Link speed (Receive/Transmit): 144/144 (Mbps) This has increased used to be 84 Mbps
Link-local IPv6 address: fe80::2b58:e711:197c:82c8%17
IPv4 address: 192.168.93.170
IPv4 DNS servers: 192.168.93.138
Manufacturer: Intel Corporation
Description: Intel(R) Wi-Fi 6E AX210 160MHz
Driver version: 23.20.0.4
Physical address (MAC): CE-5E-39-CA-87-F4
02-23-2024 01:10 PM
Well, I took the plunge and bought the AX210 HMC Wi-Fi card on Amazon and installed it in my HP 350 G1 notebook.
Got it for $25.00.
Took less than10 minutes to uninstall the old Wi-Fi and Bluetooth software and drivers, shut down the PC and swap out the cards.
Turned on the PC, connected to my network, was greeted with the 'you are now on Wi-Fi 6' message from Windows and then updated the Wi-Fi and Bluetooth drivers to the latest versions on the Intel website.
Since I am only paying for a 300 MBPS download speed, I can't really test out the card's full potential, but it was connecting at 1.2 GB/S according to the Network status in the Windows control panel.
I did this upgrade more for the experience and fun of it than to derive any real benefit.
I have recommended these modified cards to several other forum members and decided to take my own advice.
Very happy with it, the upgrade bought this 2013 notebook's Wi-Fi technology into the 2020's era.
Now I have a spare Intel 7260 AC card available for future use.
A side benefit is they tossed in a few M.2 hold down screws in the package, which I can use to install M.2 NVMe SSD's/Wi-Fi cards in PC's that didn't come with one, should the necessity arise.
HP usually doesn't include those little screws in their PC's.