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Does anyone know what the differences are between the two models as I noticed the AX211 mentioned in the wireless drivers as a supported model. Thanks!
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Hello Almighty1,
Thank you for posting on the Intel® communities.
You can see a comparison between the Intel® Wi-Fi 6E AX210 and the Intel® Wi-Fi 6E AX211 in the following link:
- https://ark.intel.com/content/www/us/en/ark/compare.html?productIds=204836,204837
Also here, you can see more information for the Intel® Wi-Fi 6E AX210 and Bluetooth® 5.2;
- https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/docs/wireless/wi-fi-6e-ax210-module-brief.html
Please, bear in mind that if you are planning to install any of these cards on a laptop or desktop computer, you will need to get in contact with the laptop/motherboard manufacturer for compatibility and drivers as well as for installation instructions.
Regards,
Deivid A.
Intel Customer Support Technician
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Hi David,
If you would read the content of the links before posting them, you would understand why people are asking about the differences.
Please ask your colleagues to pay more attention to what they publish - for sure it was not filtered by any technician.
Regards,
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Deivid A.:
Before posting, I had already looked at that and I know what the AX210 is but what is different about the AX211 because if you look at the comparison, the features are exactly the same, does the AX211 improved on anything or have something the AX210 doesn't?
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AX211 has an intel proprietary interface, otherwise they are the same. The AX201 and AX211 use a CRF interface instead of Mini PCIe / M.2
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CNVi <- in essence a vendor lock-in by adding some obscure features which no one really uses.
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@Spacefish wrote:
AX211 has an intel proprietary interface, otherwise they are the same. The AX201 and AX211 use a CRF interface instead of Mini PCIe / M.2
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CNVi <- in essence a vendor lock-in by adding some obscure features which no one really uses.
What you said would have been true as that was what someone else on reddit thought as well but if you check the ordering page at the URL below, you will find that the AX211 also uses the Mini PCIe/M.2 interfaces:
https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/sku/204837/intel-wifi-6e-ax211-gig/ordering.html
Besides, if you look here:
https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/sku/204837/intel-wifi-6e-ax211-gig/specifications.html
It actually shows:
I mean the AX210 has a page https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/docs/wireless/wi-fi-6e-ax210-module-brief.html but there is none for the AX211 so the AX211 is more of a mystery.
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Hello Almighty1,
Thank you for the information provided
I will proceed to check the issue internally in order to provide you with a more complete answer, and I will post back soon with more details.
Best regards,
Deivid A.
Intel Customer Support Technician
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hello to you, I already have an AX210 and I would also like to know the difference with the AX211 ! Thank you
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Hello Almighty1,
After an investigation, I would like to inform you that the main difference is that the AX211 supports uplink MIMO. For other details and specifications, I recommend you to check with the laptop/motherboard manufacturer as any integration must be validated with them to avoid system performance impact
Regards,
Deivid A.
Intel Customer Support Technician
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Hello DeividA_Intel:
Thank you for taking the time to research it, what does the uplink MIMO do exactly and how much performance are we talking about? As you are probably aware, many are using the Intel cards as replacements for what the
laptop/motherboad manufacturer included originally so they would not know anyways. Ofcourse is that answer even correct because for the AX210, according to the page here:
https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/docs/wireless/wi-fi-6e-ax210-module-brief.html
It says:
"The Intel® Wi-Fi 6E AX210 (Gig+) adapter is designed to support upcoming Wi-Fi 6E technology and related Wi-Fi Alliance Wi-Fi 6E1 certification. The product supports dual-stream Wi-Fi in the 2.4GHz, 5GHz and 6GHz bands, and includes improved TCP throughput— exceeding 2Gbps—and future Wi-Fi 6 R2 features, including UL MU- MIMO2 that improves UL network capacity in dense environments "
and the footnote for 2 does show at the bottom of that page:
2 Wi-Fi 6 Uplink Multi-User MIMO (Multiple Input Multiple Output) supports up to 8 streams of UL data from multiple stations improving UL network capacity in dense environment.
So looking at that, doesn't it also mean the AX210 already supports uplink MIMO? If so, that means that is not even a difference as you had stated.
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Hello Almighty1,
In order to clarify this misunderstanding and provide you with more details, I will perform internal research and let you know as soon as I have any information.
Regards,
Deivid A.
Intel Customer Support Technician
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Thanks, a lot of this would have been unnecessary if there was a link on the AX211 similar to the brief for the AX210. Without it, it seems the AX210 and the AX211 are identical.
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Hello Almighty1,
In order to get more detailed, I recommend you to check with the laptop/motherboard manufacturer and/or sales distributor since performance is linked to the system configuration and environment including Operating System (OS), chipset, access point, and other specs.
Regards,
Deivid A.
Intel Customer Support Technician
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@DeividA_Intel wrote:
Hello Almighty1,
In order to get more detailed, I recommend you to check with the laptop/motherboard manufacturer and/or sales distributor since performance is linked to the system configuration and environment including Operating System (OS), chipset, access point, and other specs.
Regards,
Deivid A.
Intel Customer Support Technician
And exactly what will that do? The laptop/computer manufacturer & sales distributor has nothing whatsoever to do with this. They all are selling something that is manufactured by Intel. The AX210 and AX211 has the exact same specs if you are using the website for information. If someone was going to buy a WiFi6E card, why would someone buy one instead of the other? Neither the laptop/computer manufacturer sales distributor would have the specs because it was not provided by Intel to them. Besides, many people who buy the AX210 and AX211 buys it from different places such as ebay and amazon as the laptop/computer manufacturer may use only Qualcomm/Atheros or other brands of cards and not Intel. Intel is the manufacturer and as @Tiino-X83 had mentioned, you are the manufacturer and if you don't even know your own specs, no one does either. You do not really want this as a complaint going to Intel Corporate Executive Offices for resolution.
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Don´t get anoyed at them, they are marketing guys probably and have no technical detail knowledge..
The AX211 is the CNVi Version of the AX210, the AX211 is missing some parts of a typical wifi card which is integrated into the CPU on modern Intel systems. In this case the MAC, this is the part of the wifi stack that handles all the logic and talks to the CPU..
Buy the AX210, the AX211 will probably not work in your system if you don´t have the appropriate PCH and Intel CPU + Bios Support..
Google for: CNVi (Wikipedia) for more information.
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Well, I am not annoyed at them but what I mean is this should be documented somewhere on what the AX211 actually is.
it might or might not mean it's the CNVi version because remember we already went through that part earlier in the discussion which was my response to your response since remember they have a ordering page with specific part numbers on the AX211 so that means it in not CNVi or else those part numbers would not exist:
https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/sku/204837/intel-wifi-6e-ax211-gig/ordering.html
What we don't know also is that I don't remember exactly but the AX210 could have been announced before WiFi 6E officially became a standard and there might be certain things that the AX210 might not be in compliance with the official spec. And it can always be similar to 802.11AC, remember the speed increases because of the amount of streams so the AX211 could have more streams than the AX210, that's why it's interesting to know what's actually different and then decide as that information should be helpful to others as well. I mean the one thing you can tell that is different is the AX211 supports Windows 11 but not anything prior to Windows 11 as a example. Regardless, the photos attached is actually of the AX211 from the FCC:
But in any case, Intel still needs to provide a product brief so people will know exactly what the AX211 is.
The AX211 also was officially tested on March 28, 2017 on a Dell Latitude E5470, does that use CNVi?
In my case, I already have 6 of the AX210.ngw's except I still don't know if I have the vPro version or not because like the other thread, they are all labeled as ax210.ngw's but there should be a way to tell the difference either by looking at it or using software.
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Hello Almighty1,
In order to help you further on this, I would like to confirm the following:
1. Are you planning to buy or integrate any of these wireless cards?
2. Are you looking for this information because you are developing software or for any other reasons?
I will appreciate you let me know.
Regards,
Deivid A.
Intel Customer Support Technician
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Hello Almighty1,
I do appreciate the clarification, I will proceed to investigate further on this and let you know as soon as possible.
Best regards,
Deivid A.
Intel Customer Support Technician
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