Wi-Fi cards make terrible access points. ZERO cards are suggested. They are marketed and built for use in wireless client devices. The few cards with working access point capabilities might do in a small dorm room or apartment with a client or two but not for anything more.
after 6 days we're made a full turn, and we're back at the 1st reply OP got = don't do it.
Actually one said intel is terrible and another said all wifi cards are terrible. So its not your "full turn". Also there is a question for more skilled people. If this cards all are bad why they manafacturing it and where they are used if they not working as it shoud... And who even buy it so defective....
Well, all would include intel too ....
Then I guess you're in the wrong forum, if you consider all the replies you've gotten, being from "less skilled" people...
They're good at what they're designed for, STA mode, not AP.
Apples and bananas.
Most of the cards are intended to be run in STA (client) mode. Full stop.
However... while, some don't support AP mode at all and there are some that are are barely supported in AP mode, a few may actually have moderate to good support for it. However, essentially all of them are poor as APs from the perspective of radio performance because they don't have purpose-optimized antenna designs and deterministic positioning.
A purpose built AP (or all-in-one wifi router) benefits greatly by the optimization of the antennas themselves and the known and consistent mechanical positioning of each of the individual antenna units within a precision housing. Beyond that, the enclosures often made of plastic which won't impact the RF signal radiation (unlike a metal-chassis x86 mini PC router). These factors significantly enhance speed and range performance both in general and also as a function of the advanced spatial stream processing that these units can achieve.
You really like to make every possible sentence the way you imagine it. On public forum where thousants people enter read and reply most "skilled" mean people with knowleage in this area... so im considering that in public forum there are less skilled and more skilled people... i didnt even mention replies before.....
amazing you can make that kind of distinction, here, considering you've been part of this forum for almost one week ...
ok i understand now, im runing this intel for 2 days on 2.4 and performance is good, no dropping in speed or in signal, i connect 4 phones 1 laptop 2 smart tv. and this "router" is even on the bare edge of house and he spread solid signal with this tiny 5dbi antennas.
So to summarise even suggestions as Wi-Fi 6E AX3000 Mini PCIe Module AW7916-NPD will not "work" as normal home router /stable/ (for max 7-10 devices).
i dindt mention anyone who reply? Im less skilled for example in wifi, and becide that im on internet and forums from 2001 maybe when dial up was only internet, i run many many forums, many communities from games to serious one, im a member of thousands forums all over the world, even on xda, asus merlin, etc etc and i never saw more toxic guy than you. You twist words in front of my nose and u keep doing it. I dont understand what "satisfaction" do u have from this? This is sick...
oh! you only meant the people who didn't reply, sorry then, I take it back ...
so was I, I ran a BBS for a very long time, wanna start a club ?
AW7916-NPD Wi-Fi 6E module is designed for AP mode, this chip will work for eveything you need, make sure you have a mini pcie on your computer or get an adapter on ebay.
Regards!
Ok i currently canot find that pcie here. What do u think will this one work? I find it near me...
Linux Driver:(iwlwifi-cc-46.3cfab8da.0)
support kernel 5.1/5.2
iwlwifi == intel.
Pffff.... And this one
But anyway as i see pcie is a adapter and card is probably m2 and as i know i need card pcie not m2
DL the Win driver, and find out ...