That driver would be included in the chipset drivers
You only obtain drivers for a laptop from the maker and no where else
Win7 went out of support some years ago so no MS Updates of any type
Realtek RTL8191SE 802.11b/g/n WiFi Adapter driver
RTL8811AU wireless adapter not working on Windows 7 Desktop - Windows 7
Realtek Wifi Drivers
Realtek wifi driver
Videos
Can someone please tell me where to download the drivers for the realtek 8852CE wifi card? I'm having wifi issues and I'm sure it's due to this card but before replacing it with an intel one I want to make sure it's not just an outdated driver.
I couldn't find anything on realtek's shitty website and the lenovo scan says all my stuff is up to date, but this thing is still using 2023 wifi drivers and there's gotta be something newer by now.
For context I have a legion 7i gen 9 and when playing rocket league or any online game, every 15 minutes I will either disconnect or get a 2 minute long lag spike where my ping goes up to 2000 and everything starts teleporting. I know it's not my wifi because I have a 2 month old wifi 6 router with 400mbps speeds that all my other devices use perfectly.
Okay, just gonna list the issue, it's been driving me crazy for months and I can't find a solution.
-Lenovo yoga 7 AMD -Has realtek wifi driver -Works perfect at home -At university, blue screens with prompt "irql driver not less or equal, rtwlane602.sys" -I sold my last dell and switched to this laptop because I can't take school exams because I can't connect to the wifi at school -I tried rolling back to a previous update, worked for a week but is now doing the same thing -I don't know how to switch the wifi driver, I am 100 percent convinced the wifi driver is the issue -Im guessing I can't download an Intel driver since it is an AMD laptop -Please help, my schools IT department has not been of any help
Try here:
http://www.realtek.com.tw/downloads/downloadsView.aspx?Langid=1&PNid=13&PFid=5&Level=5&Conn=4&DownTypeID=3&GetDown=false
Otherwise, I would suggest you look up your motherboard model on the Gigabyte support website and download the ethernet driver from there.
Hope this helps..
I found two versions of the driver :
- RealTek RTL8111 Driver v.7.076
- Realtek Gigabit Ethernet Driver 7.069 for Windows 7
I agree that non-working Realtek drivers need to be brought to the attention of Microsoft. In relation to this particular driver, no it's not just that motherboard. It's pretty much any board using the increasingly common Realtek 8111C PCI-E gigabit controller. Even worse is the situation in Vista where the basic install loads a non-working driver. It all becomes a big issue when attempting to do a network restore or a Windows Home Server network PC restore. It says it works, but it all falls over without really giving you a clue that the non working LAN driver is actually the cause.
Personally, I never install drivers from the Windows update site - it nearly always leads to grief. However, the AIK's for both Vista & Win 7 are readily available. It's very worthwhile downloading them and learning the ropes on upgrading LAN, SATA & RAID controllers in the boot.wim images for Vista & Win 7 so that the latest drivers are installed to start with. It's doable for WHS too, but with WHS you have to remember to update both the 2003 drivers with N-Lite as well as the boot.wim image with Vista drivers.
Anyway, just wanted to add my support to this issue - better to not include drivers than to include drivers that don't work.
Same issue here. I installed the latest drivers via Windows Update. They didn't work. I simply used the "rollback driver" opton from the properties menu of the network adapter and was back on the internet. I notice that me and you have the exact same motherboard, the Gigabyte GA-EP45-UD3P. Maybe its only a problem on this motherboard? Hope we some more people report here if they have the same problem.
AMD Athlon 64 3200+ 1GIG Memory ATI Radeon X800XL 250gig W.D. Hard Disk
I found a workaround that appears to be working for us which was the first reply by Brian Whelton
Hi all, thanks for chiming in I noticed the Windows Update Assistant had somehow got on to my Enterprise version of Windows and was asking my users to update to the 1709 version of Windows 10. I use Wsus for updates and had turned the 1709 update off. As the disruption of 1-2h install time was too long. The plan was to get all the laptops in test it and then update it for them. After the Win 10 1709 update was installed (only on a few machines so far) through the windows update assistant I saw…
The disabling the virtual WiFi adapter appears to be working so far. Awaiting to get it tested as more laptops come back.
This is one of the most bizarre issues I have come across and to date, I have found no workaround or fix.
Mainly HP laptops with Realtek wireless network adapters, try to connect to the company network (we have 2 one for setup of a software that helps connect to the main network and means that the user should have no issues connecting after a password change as it should auto update the password. Both of these networks fail to connect
Here is the really strange thing, we probably have around 4000 users that use their laptops/phones etc on WiFi but around 1-2% cannot connect their laptops to the WiFi due to this issue, when you try to connect and during the connection process it disables the network adapter and brings it back online and then states it cannot connect to this network.
What I have discovered so far:
Seems to be Realtek Wireless adapters of various versions and driver versions.
it is mostly apparent on Windows 10 Update 1803 but also been experiencing it on windows 8.1. However, we have had some laptops with exactly the same specs and hardware and OS versions that connects fine
The connection doesn’t get as far as the authentication server so there are no log files saved on it to say why it is not managing to connect.
A USB wireless adapter on the laptops connects with no issue at all.
The laptops also can connect to networks that have WPA2-Personal encryption.
What we have tried:
Disabling and re-enabling the network adapter, in network settings in control panel, uninstalling the network adapter and reinstalling it in device manager, updating drivers, rolling back to previous versions of drivers, checking for any outstanding windows updates using an ethernet connection.
Any help on what to try would be extremely welcome.