I'm pretty sure they don't make them at 2400mb speeds, which is probably due to limitations on the I/O port. Your best bet is this Asus:I want to buy a usb wireless network card that supports wifi6, the usb/typec interface supports 2400mb/160mhz wireless network card? I only see wireless cards with 1200mb/80mhz, which is not what I want. Please recommend one, thank you!
Thank you for your reply, but the wireless network card you recommended is not what I want, it is based on 80mhz bandwidth, I want usb 160mhz.I'm pretty sure they don't make them at 2400mb speeds, which is probably due to limitations on the I/O port. Your best bet is this Asus:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09QQWQS1N/?tag=snbforums-20
Can this be done? m.2 interface to usb? Should I buy another m.2 ax210? Thank you, I will look for such a network card and adapter。Buy an ax210 module and then find a M2 USB sled to put it into and you're all set.
You can get M.2 sleds to interface with USB and USB-C, however those are storage M.2's with connectors B & M, M, and B (with various types of storage e.g. SATA SSD, SATA M.2, PCIe NVMe SSD, and PCIe AHCI SSD. Wifi cards, like the AX210 are A & E connectors. I've never seen an A & E sled adapt to USB or USB-C. But if you find one, please link it because I have a spare AX210 card lying around here that I could put to good* use on that adapter. I would've bought one by now, I've just never found one.Can this be done? m.2 interface to usb? Should I buy another m.2 ax210? Thank you, I will look for such a network card and adapter。
I think the issue is the complex WiFi protocols won't fit through the four bus connections on USB protocol
And I think you're oversimplifying things, technology isn't magic, and sometimes it is beneficial to get into the weeds to try and understand why this would or wouldn't work. Obviously there must be a reason as to why there isn't readily available a WiFi A & E sled to USB adapter?I think you're overthinking things since the M2 handles the RF and the USB handles the data
Data originates through HZ, which is a measurement of electromagnetic frequency. How many bus paths determine how much bandwidth (HZ), which determines bit rate (0 and 1), which will affect the WiFi throughput. This is Shannon's Theorem, which shows how bit rate is limited by bandwidth and the signal-to-noise ratio of the channel: C=B log2(1+SNR). So, if we count the differences between WiFi bus paths VS. USB bus path, then we could extrapolate the protocol limitations which then in turn affect protocols. Or we could just say maybe this product doesn't exist* because it's impossible to engineer.It's all data transferred with 0s and 1s.
Because if they make a pretty all in one option they can charge 3x more.Obviously there must be a reason as to why there isn't readily available a WiFi A & E sled to USB adapter?
5gbps port can handle a 1200mbps 160mhz WiFi signal just fine. The issue is related more so to the OEMs not making adapters due to certification delays. The usual suspects in making the chips for WiFi delayed things waiting on 6e spectrum to be released to not have to make 6 & 6e variants. Intel on the other hand has both options providing 160mhz WiFi adapters in m2 format. USB options tend to use realtek mediatek Qualcomm and others because they're cheaper than Intel. It's nothing to do with the electrical engineering as you seem to be stuck on.
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