F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks It provides a solid real-world speed of around 300 Mbps, depending on your environment and network conditions.

It provides a solid real-world speed of around 300 Mbps, depending on your environment and network conditions.

It provides a solid real-world speed of around 300 Mbps, depending on your environment and network conditions.

D
DarckMoule
Member
160
02-06-2023, 10:32 AM
#1
Looking for a wireless adapter on Amazon? This product offers a 300Mbps connection.
D
DarckMoule
02-06-2023, 10:32 AM #1

Looking for a wireless adapter on Amazon? This product offers a 300Mbps connection.

J
Joncus
Junior Member
18
02-06-2023, 07:25 PM
#2
Anticipate a maximum around 150-250 Mbps. Roughly 18-31 MB/s is achievable. USB Wi-Fi adapters are known for inconsistency, with performance strongly tied to your network's signal strength.
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Joncus
02-06-2023, 07:25 PM #2

Anticipate a maximum around 150-250 Mbps. Roughly 18-31 MB/s is achievable. USB Wi-Fi adapters are known for inconsistency, with performance strongly tied to your network's signal strength.

M
MasterOv_Yt
Junior Member
27
02-13-2023, 02:03 AM
#3
I have a nearly identical model that delivers around 40-60 megabits per second in the same space as the Wi-Fi access point. As a single client, it performs well at 150 megabits per second, but this drops to 40-60 Mbps on a 150 MHz channel—especially when interference is common. Using 40 MHz channels would be even better for 2.4 GHz networks.
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MasterOv_Yt
02-13-2023, 02:03 AM #3

I have a nearly identical model that delivers around 40-60 megabits per second in the same space as the Wi-Fi access point. As a single client, it performs well at 150 megabits per second, but this drops to 40-60 Mbps on a 150 MHz channel—especially when interference is common. Using 40 MHz channels would be even better for 2.4 GHz networks.

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yanzwan
Junior Member
32
02-13-2023, 03:40 AM
#4
I'm testing with a TP-link USB Wi-Fi adapter (different model). It delivers around 45Mbit, but gets hot when you maintain a steady load of 25Mbps or more for some time. The connection drops significantly unless I unplug and plug it back in. This issue also occurs with another USB Wi-Fi adapter I own, so it seems to be a problem with one of the three dongles I have. It looks like a single unit has failed completely.
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yanzwan
02-13-2023, 03:40 AM #4

I'm testing with a TP-link USB Wi-Fi adapter (different model). It delivers around 45Mbit, but gets hot when you maintain a steady load of 25Mbps or more for some time. The connection drops significantly unless I unplug and plug it back in. This issue also occurs with another USB Wi-Fi adapter I own, so it seems to be a problem with one of the three dongles I have. It looks like a single unit has failed completely.

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Lucky_TNT
Junior Member
41
02-19-2023, 01:45 AM
#5
30 mbps
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Lucky_TNT
02-19-2023, 01:45 AM #5

30 mbps