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So I've been having this irritating connection drops and sudden ping spikes for a full year. I now have my Broadcom card in hand in case the disconnects recur.
I will report back her if I do encounter any disconnects. I am done fooling with this ridiculousness.Įdit: Update, Three days now and I have had no drops since rolling back to the original Microsoft supplied drivers. If I do not receive any disconnects between now and the time the Broadcom card arrives, I will just go with this set up but will have the replacement card at the ready if I receive another single disconnect. I plan to continue running my notebook in this manner until my Broadcom card arrives.
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As of last night since I rolled back to the original drivers that shipped with Windows 8.1 and hid the driver update which installs Intel drivers, I have not had a single disconnect. With Windows 8.1 I have had the occasional disconnect with the Microsoft supplied drivers but had numerous disconnects with all of the Intel supplied drivers.
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I know that when I was running Windows 8 using the Microsoft supplied drivers, I eliminated all disconnects.
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No, I had disconnects with the Intel drivers without the PROSet/Wireless software installed. Re: I therefore conclude, like you, that it is the Intel® PROSet/Wireless Software that is the problem and not the drivers.
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If you do not right click on the available drivers in Windows Update and hide them, Windows Update will install them and the disconnects will start again. Then run windows update and hide any updated drivers available as they are provided by Intel and will cause disconnects. If it has installed drivers, shown as provided by Intel, on the properties page repeat the process above until drivers provided by Microsoft have been installed. I don't recall the Windows 8 version but it will be the original drivers that shipped with Windows 8. In the case of Windows 8.1 it will be version 15.10.0.12 dated. Make sure that it has installed a driver provided by Microsoft. Uninstall any associated Intel drivers and software from control panel, then open device manager and right click on the 6235 network card and uninstall the card and check to delete the drivers. I also used the same solution with Windows 8 which eliminated any connection drops. I have come up with a solution that greatly reduces the connection drops if you are on Windows 8.1. If you prefer to ask questions, make comments, and/or receive answers on this support forum (Wireless Networking Support Community), please start a new thread or find an existing thread that matches your specific issue with your specific hardware/software.
If you are still experiencing connectivity issues after installing the very latest software and drivers and you require further troubleshooting, please contact Intel Customer Support. The 17.1.0 version of Intel® PROSet/Wireless Software and Drivers has fixes for connectivity related issues with the Intel® Centrino® Advanced-N 6235 wireless adapter. This thread will remain on the forum for you to reference, but no new posts will be possible on this thread. The " /message/169514# 169514 Sporadic but recurring connection dropouts on an Intel 6235 wireless adapter" thread will be locked. I have tried different changes in the driver settings but with no success. Now I just went back to 15.1.0 and it's been ok so far, but i'm not very optimistic. I already tried going back from the recent 15.2 version to the previous 15.1.1 (after uninstalling through the device manager), but the problem still persists. On the 6235, going back to a 14.x driver does not seem to be an option on the table, because the device seems to be only supported by 15.x versions. The fact that the problem occurs on two different cards (62) leads me to believe that there is a driver problem. The wireless router itself is fine as there are over a dozen devices from all types of brands that connect regularly to it without any problem at all. The adapter suddenly disconnects and won't reconnect to the wireless network unless it is reset.
These can occur randomly after 5 or after 50 minutes. If my memory is correct, the Intel Proset 14.x version range worked flawlessly, but the 15.x drivers lead to the dropouts (I always use 64-bit drivers). Previously, I already encountered the issue with this adapter's predecessor, the Intel Centrino 6230 and only managed to resolve it by going back to an older driver version. My system is a brandnew desktop computer with an Intel i7 3770 Quad-Core CPU, an Intel Z77 chipset, an Asrock Z77E-ITX mainboard, 16 GB of RAM, and Windows 7 64-bit.
I have the same issues of intermittent sudden connection dropouts as reported by others with the Intel Centrino Advanced-N 6235 Wifi adapter and the Intel Proset 15.x drivers!