Access and configure the advanced adapter settings to meet your wireless networking needs.
Click or the topic for details:
Note | Certain properties may not appear depending on the type of wireless adapter, driver version, or operating system installed. |
Allows you to select whether the adapter operates in the 802.11b, 802.11g, and 802.11a bands.
Note | To enable 802.11n/ac, keep the default setting for Wireless mode. Select HT mode for 802.11n, or VHT mode for 802.11ac under HT mode. |
The setting lets you select 802.11n High Throughput mode (HT Mode), 802.11ac Very High Throughput Mode (VHT Mode), 802.11ax or disable 802.11n/ac/ax modes. Default value maybe 802.11ac or 802.11ax depending on the adapter you have.
The 802.11n standard adds multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO). MIMO increases data throughput to improve the transfer rate. Use the setting to enable or disable high throughput mode support (MIMO - 802.11n).
Notes | The settings are only available for the adapters:
To achieve transfer rates greater than 54 Mbps on 802.11n connections, you must select WPA2-AES security. You can select no security (None) to enable network setup and troubleshooting. An administrator can enable or disable support for high throughput mode to reduce power consumption or conflicts with other bands or compatibility issues. |
Use channel width to set high throughput mode channel width in order to maximize performance.
Ad-hoc channel 802.11 b/g is the band and channel selection for device to device (ad-hoc) networks. You don't need to change the channel unless the other computers in the ad-hoc network are not using the default channel.
If you must change the channel, select the allowed operating channel:
Note | This setting isn't available on Windows® 10 |
The Quality of Service (QoS) control in ad-hoc networks prioritizes traffic from the access point over a Wi-Fi Local Area Network (LAN) based on traffic classification. Wi-Fi Multimedia* (WMM*) is the QoS certification of the Wi-Fi Alliance* (WFA). When WMM is enabled, the adapter uses WMM to support priority tagging and queuing capabilities for Wi-Fi networks.
Note | This setting isn't available on Windows® 10. The feature isn't installed through an Administrator Package when your computer has either an:
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ARP offload is the network adapter's ability to respond to an IPv4 ARP request without waking the computer. To enable the feature, both the hardware and the driver must support ARP offload.
The setting communicates to surrounding networks that the Wi-Fi adapter isn't tolerant of 40 MHz channels in the 2.4 GHz band. When disabled the adapter doesn't send this notification.
By default, the Wi-Fi adapter will perform periodic scan for other available Access Points (AP).
Disabling this behavior can be helpful when using application software that is sensitive to brief interruptions in network connectivity.
Note | It is not recommended to change this setting for users who are mobile throughout the day. |
Group Temporal Key (GTK) Rekey is used to encrypt and decrypt network traffic.
Note | Some legacy APs may have compatibility issue with supporting the SMPS mode and may cause various link quality problems such as low throughput. Change this setting to No SMPS may help to work around the issue. |
Use mixed mode protection to avoid data collisions in a mixed 802.11b and 802.11g environment. Use Request to Send/Clear to Send (RTS/CTS) in an environment where clients may not hear each other. Use CTS-to-self to gain more throughput in an environment where clients are within hearing proximity.
Note | The setting isn't valid when 802.11n mode is enabled. |
NS offload is the network adapter's ability to respond to a Neighbor Discovery Neighbor Solicitation request with a Neighbor Advertisement without waking the computer. Both the hardware and the driver must support NS offload to enable this feature.
Enables power saving by reducing the number of receive interrupts. The feature reduces receive interrupts by coalescing random broadcast or multicast packets.
This setting alters the signal strength threshold at which the WiFi adapter starts scanning for another candidate AP. The default value is Medium. Depending on the environment, one option may work better than the other. You may try other values to see which works best for your environment. However, it is recommended to revert back to the default (Medium) if no improvement is observed with other values.
Sleep on WoWLAN Disconnect is the ability to put the device to sleep/drop connection when WoWLAN is disconnected.
Enhance the transmit throughput by enabling packet bursting.
When this setting is enabled and the client (Wi-Fi adapter) has buffered enough data, the client is able to hold longer possession of the air medium than it normally does to send the data to the Access Point (AP).
This only improves the upload throughput (from client to the AP) and is mostly effective for usages like uploading large files or upstream benchmarks.
Note | In a Wi-Fi network only one client can transmit at a time. So the throughput for other clients in the same network may be negatively impacted when this feature is enabled. |
Note:
The optimal setting is to set the transmit power at the lowest possible level still compatible with communication quality. The setting allows the maximum number of wireless devices to operate in dense areas. It reduces interference with other devices that share the radio spectrum. If you decrease the transmit power, you reduce the radio coverage.
Note | This setting takes effect when either Network (Infrastructure) or Device to Device (ad-hoc) mode is used. |
U-APSD (or WMM-Power Save or WMM-PS) is a Wi-Fi capability that saves power consumption on low periodic latency-sensitive traffic modes, like a VoIP. We have identified interoperability (IOT) issues with certain access points that result in reduced RX throughput.
If enabled, the setting wakes the computer from a sleep state when it receives a Magic Packet from a sending computer. The Magic Packet contains the MAC address of the intended destination computer. Enabling turns on Wake on Magic Packet. Disabling turns off Wake on Magic Packet. It only disables the Magic Packet feature, not Wake on Wireless LAN.
Wakes the computer from a sleep state when an adapter receives a particular wake pattern. Window 7*, Windows 8* and Windows® 10 support the feature. Patterns are typically:
Disabling only disables the pattern match feature, not Wake on Wireless LAN.