Why cant I connect to 5GHz with my b/g/n WiFi Card?
I have a Realtek RTL8188CE 802.11b/g/n on my Quantal amd64 system. I installed the kernel modules for that card and modprobe that module. I can only view to the 2.4GHz WLANs. The module Im talking about was downloaded from the realtek page.
Here is some good info. Well my configuration.
wireless
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I have a Realtek RTL8188CE 802.11b/g/n on my Quantal amd64 system. I installed the kernel modules for that card and modprobe that module. I can only view to the 2.4GHz WLANs. The module Im talking about was downloaded from the realtek page.
Here is some good info. Well my configuration.
wireless
add a comment |
I have a Realtek RTL8188CE 802.11b/g/n on my Quantal amd64 system. I installed the kernel modules for that card and modprobe that module. I can only view to the 2.4GHz WLANs. The module Im talking about was downloaded from the realtek page.
Here is some good info. Well my configuration.
wireless
I have a Realtek RTL8188CE 802.11b/g/n on my Quantal amd64 system. I installed the kernel modules for that card and modprobe that module. I can only view to the 2.4GHz WLANs. The module Im talking about was downloaded from the realtek page.
Here is some good info. Well my configuration.
wireless
wireless
asked Apr 10 '13 at 23:58
JhonnytunesJhonnytunes
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4854919
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2 Answers
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The Realtek RTL8188CE WLAN adapter is designed to connect to a IEEE 802.11b/g/n communication protocol. This protocol is available for both the 2.4, and the 5.0 GHz frequency band. However according to the hardware specifications this adapter like many other "802.11n" adapters only supports the 2.4 GHz band:
- Complete 802.11n solution for 2.4GHz band Realtek
To be able to connect to signals in the 5.0 GHz band you need to have an adapter supporting this. These usually are named as "dual-band" or similar.
2
To find out if the adapter supports 5GHz you can always check with iwlist.
– Evan Carroll
Jun 18 '14 at 18:43
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Not all N cards support 5GHz. This one doesn't.
A clue is the fact that it is labelled with B and G but not A. Of the standards older than N, B and G both used the 2.4GHz band while A used the 5GHz band. N cards supporting both bands are often labeled as supporting A/B/G/N, whereas N cards supporting only 2.4GHz are often labeled as B/G/N.
The newer standard AC also uses the 5GHz band. Only N supports both bands, with mandatory 2.4GHz support and optional 5GHz support. So if a device supports AC and N that should mean it supports N on both bands.
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
The Realtek RTL8188CE WLAN adapter is designed to connect to a IEEE 802.11b/g/n communication protocol. This protocol is available for both the 2.4, and the 5.0 GHz frequency band. However according to the hardware specifications this adapter like many other "802.11n" adapters only supports the 2.4 GHz band:
- Complete 802.11n solution for 2.4GHz band Realtek
To be able to connect to signals in the 5.0 GHz band you need to have an adapter supporting this. These usually are named as "dual-band" or similar.
2
To find out if the adapter supports 5GHz you can always check with iwlist.
– Evan Carroll
Jun 18 '14 at 18:43
add a comment |
The Realtek RTL8188CE WLAN adapter is designed to connect to a IEEE 802.11b/g/n communication protocol. This protocol is available for both the 2.4, and the 5.0 GHz frequency band. However according to the hardware specifications this adapter like many other "802.11n" adapters only supports the 2.4 GHz band:
- Complete 802.11n solution for 2.4GHz band Realtek
To be able to connect to signals in the 5.0 GHz band you need to have an adapter supporting this. These usually are named as "dual-band" or similar.
2
To find out if the adapter supports 5GHz you can always check with iwlist.
– Evan Carroll
Jun 18 '14 at 18:43
add a comment |
The Realtek RTL8188CE WLAN adapter is designed to connect to a IEEE 802.11b/g/n communication protocol. This protocol is available for both the 2.4, and the 5.0 GHz frequency band. However according to the hardware specifications this adapter like many other "802.11n" adapters only supports the 2.4 GHz band:
- Complete 802.11n solution for 2.4GHz band Realtek
To be able to connect to signals in the 5.0 GHz band you need to have an adapter supporting this. These usually are named as "dual-band" or similar.
The Realtek RTL8188CE WLAN adapter is designed to connect to a IEEE 802.11b/g/n communication protocol. This protocol is available for both the 2.4, and the 5.0 GHz frequency band. However according to the hardware specifications this adapter like many other "802.11n" adapters only supports the 2.4 GHz band:
- Complete 802.11n solution for 2.4GHz band Realtek
To be able to connect to signals in the 5.0 GHz band you need to have an adapter supporting this. These usually are named as "dual-band" or similar.
answered Apr 11 '13 at 6:25
TakkatTakkat
106k35249375
106k35249375
2
To find out if the adapter supports 5GHz you can always check with iwlist.
– Evan Carroll
Jun 18 '14 at 18:43
add a comment |
2
To find out if the adapter supports 5GHz you can always check with iwlist.
– Evan Carroll
Jun 18 '14 at 18:43
2
2
To find out if the adapter supports 5GHz you can always check with iwlist.
– Evan Carroll
Jun 18 '14 at 18:43
To find out if the adapter supports 5GHz you can always check with iwlist.
– Evan Carroll
Jun 18 '14 at 18:43
add a comment |
Not all N cards support 5GHz. This one doesn't.
A clue is the fact that it is labelled with B and G but not A. Of the standards older than N, B and G both used the 2.4GHz band while A used the 5GHz band. N cards supporting both bands are often labeled as supporting A/B/G/N, whereas N cards supporting only 2.4GHz are often labeled as B/G/N.
The newer standard AC also uses the 5GHz band. Only N supports both bands, with mandatory 2.4GHz support and optional 5GHz support. So if a device supports AC and N that should mean it supports N on both bands.
add a comment |
Not all N cards support 5GHz. This one doesn't.
A clue is the fact that it is labelled with B and G but not A. Of the standards older than N, B and G both used the 2.4GHz band while A used the 5GHz band. N cards supporting both bands are often labeled as supporting A/B/G/N, whereas N cards supporting only 2.4GHz are often labeled as B/G/N.
The newer standard AC also uses the 5GHz band. Only N supports both bands, with mandatory 2.4GHz support and optional 5GHz support. So if a device supports AC and N that should mean it supports N on both bands.
add a comment |
Not all N cards support 5GHz. This one doesn't.
A clue is the fact that it is labelled with B and G but not A. Of the standards older than N, B and G both used the 2.4GHz band while A used the 5GHz band. N cards supporting both bands are often labeled as supporting A/B/G/N, whereas N cards supporting only 2.4GHz are often labeled as B/G/N.
The newer standard AC also uses the 5GHz band. Only N supports both bands, with mandatory 2.4GHz support and optional 5GHz support. So if a device supports AC and N that should mean it supports N on both bands.
Not all N cards support 5GHz. This one doesn't.
A clue is the fact that it is labelled with B and G but not A. Of the standards older than N, B and G both used the 2.4GHz band while A used the 5GHz band. N cards supporting both bands are often labeled as supporting A/B/G/N, whereas N cards supporting only 2.4GHz are often labeled as B/G/N.
The newer standard AC also uses the 5GHz band. Only N supports both bands, with mandatory 2.4GHz support and optional 5GHz support. So if a device supports AC and N that should mean it supports N on both bands.
edited Jan 2 at 0:58
answered Apr 11 '13 at 6:31
thomasrutterthomasrutter
26.6k46389
26.6k46389
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protected by Community♦ Sep 2 '18 at 14:16
Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).
Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?