F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Attempting to connect the HTC Vive Wireless Adapter to a laptop...

Attempting to connect the HTC Vive Wireless Adapter to a laptop...

Attempting to connect the HTC Vive Wireless Adapter to a laptop...

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ChazmanC98
Member
207
05-31-2016, 03:40 PM
#1
I observed that the Vive wireless adapter needs a PCIe 1x wireless card, which can only be connected to a desktop PC. This seems unnecessary since many VR players use laptops and I prefer avoiding the inferior TPCast version. However, it might be possible to use an external GPU enclosure and insert the wireless card via Thunderbolt 3. These enclosures are around $200, which is more than half the cost of the adapter you already have. I’m looking for any cheaper alternatives or options.
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ChazmanC98
05-31-2016, 03:40 PM #1

I observed that the Vive wireless adapter needs a PCIe 1x wireless card, which can only be connected to a desktop PC. This seems unnecessary since many VR players use laptops and I prefer avoiding the inferior TPCast version. However, it might be possible to use an external GPU enclosure and insert the wireless card via Thunderbolt 3. These enclosures are around $200, which is more than half the cost of the adapter you already have. I’m looking for any cheaper alternatives or options.

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NPower1
Junior Member
21
06-01-2016, 07:43 PM
#2
The M.2 to PCIe should work... I don't see a reason as to why it wouldn't work.
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NPower1
06-01-2016, 07:43 PM #2

The M.2 to PCIe should work... I don't see a reason as to why it wouldn't work.

J
JebThePleb
Posting Freak
898
06-12-2016, 04:12 PM
#3
Perhaps it's just via a USB 3.1 connection, though GPU mining riser cards typically employ USB 3 while accessing native PCIe ports.
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JebThePleb
06-12-2016, 04:12 PM #3

Perhaps it's just via a USB 3.1 connection, though GPU mining riser cards typically employ USB 3 while accessing native PCIe ports.

K
Kleins_
Junior Member
12
06-13-2016, 01:23 PM
#4
It's true. I'm not entirely confident about it, but it seems safe to try. From what I observed, the price is roughly around $100 CAD.
K
Kleins_
06-13-2016, 01:23 PM #4

It's true. I'm not entirely confident about it, but it seems safe to try. From what I observed, the price is roughly around $100 CAD.

V
Veltdeft
Junior Member
11
06-13-2016, 05:40 PM
#5
Linus covered PCI extensions for laptops previously. It seems you likely have an NVME-capable M.2 port, though some M.2 slots might only support SATA 3, which doesn't provide access to the PCI lanes. Only NVME uses PCIe lanes, so your slot could indeed be SATA 3 only.
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Veltdeft
06-13-2016, 05:40 PM #5

Linus covered PCI extensions for laptops previously. It seems you likely have an NVME-capable M.2 port, though some M.2 slots might only support SATA 3, which doesn't provide access to the PCI lanes. Only NVME uses PCIe lanes, so your slot could indeed be SATA 3 only.

L
Lasaurus
Junior Member
11
07-05-2016, 04:52 AM
#6
I don't know if that fix works with Vive Wireless on an MSI Trident Artic.
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Lasaurus
07-05-2016, 04:52 AM #6

I don't know if that fix works with Vive Wireless on an MSI Trident Artic.

D
118
07-05-2016, 05:15 AM
#7
It might be wise to set up a separate thread for that question.
D
DragonSlayer39
07-05-2016, 05:15 AM #7

It might be wise to set up a separate thread for that question.