F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks Only built-in network cards show 230-250 ping, while USB Wi-Fi adapters display 30 ping.

Only built-in network cards show 230-250 ping, while USB Wi-Fi adapters display 30 ping.

Only built-in network cards show 230-250 ping, while USB Wi-Fi adapters display 30 ping.

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QuizZro
Junior Member
19
12-04-2025, 04:47 AM
#1
Hi, I see you're experiencing issues with your gaming laptop setup. It sounds like the network card isn't the main problem—your ping is low (around 30ms) on both Wi‑Fi and Ethernet, which suggests the connection is stable. You've tried changing the network adapter four times, updated the motherboard, and installed multiple Windows builds, yet you're still stuck. It might be a software or driver issue rather than hardware failure. Let's troubleshoot further.
Q
QuizZro
12-04-2025, 04:47 AM #1

Hi, I see you're experiencing issues with your gaming laptop setup. It sounds like the network card isn't the main problem—your ping is low (around 30ms) on both Wi‑Fi and Ethernet, which suggests the connection is stable. You've tried changing the network adapter four times, updated the motherboard, and installed multiple Windows builds, yet you're still stuck. It might be a software or driver issue rather than hardware failure. Let's troubleshoot further.

S
Serilium
Member
183
12-06-2025, 04:54 AM
#2
You indicate a laptop setup despite mentioning a desktop, and you’ve changed your motherboard. You’re using a Realtek card but connecting it via USB instead of the original wireless adapter. Your current ping values are being reported while playing games, and you’re checking for latency outside gaming sessions. You’ve downloaded the troublesome Wi-Fi card drivers directly from Realtek.
S
Serilium
12-06-2025, 04:54 AM #2

You indicate a laptop setup despite mentioning a desktop, and you’ve changed your motherboard. You’re using a Realtek card but connecting it via USB instead of the original wireless adapter. Your current ping values are being reported while playing games, and you’re checking for latency outside gaming sessions. You’ve downloaded the troublesome Wi-Fi card drivers directly from Realtek.

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lizzard89
Senior Member
707
12-07-2025, 11:25 PM
#3
Based on the maker of your laptop, consider using an Intel AX210 chip—it’s usually more dependable than budget Realtek options.
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lizzard89
12-07-2025, 11:25 PM #3

Based on the maker of your laptop, consider using an Intel AX210 chip—it’s usually more dependable than budget Realtek options.

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xArcherBunny
Junior Member
48
12-08-2025, 01:13 AM
#4
It's a laptop with a new motherboard, CPU, and GPU under warranty. The high ping issue only appears on the built-in Realtek network card, not the TP-Link USB adapter I purchased. I checked ping using Rocket League and Speedtest.net, even outside games. I tried downloading the driver directly before, but nothing changed.
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xArcherBunny
12-08-2025, 01:13 AM #4

It's a laptop with a new motherboard, CPU, and GPU under warranty. The high ping issue only appears on the built-in Realtek network card, not the TP-Link USB adapter I purchased. I checked ping using Rocket League and Speedtest.net, even outside games. I tried downloading the driver directly before, but nothing changed.

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mistercraft77
Posting Freak
900
12-14-2025, 10:30 PM
#5
I need to locate a suitable network chip for my motherboard. It's an FA506IH model.
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mistercraft77
12-14-2025, 10:30 PM #5

I need to locate a suitable network chip for my motherboard. It's an FA506IH model.

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Absalonse
Junior Member
47
12-15-2025, 02:19 AM
#6
ASUS does not add special access, the AX210 should function properly.
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Absalonse
12-15-2025, 02:19 AM #6

ASUS does not add special access, the AX210 should function properly.