TRENDnet 300Mbps Wireless N PCI Adapter ( TEW-623PI Version 2.0R)
Posted on | October 25, 2009 | 3 Comments
The 300Mbps Wireless N-Draft PCI Adapter allows you to connect wirelessly with supercharged speed, range and reliability. Wireless speeds increase up to 300Mbps when connecting to TRENDnet Wireless N-Draft access points or wireless routers. This 802.11n device seamlessly connects to your wireless network without performance degradation.
Category: wireless pci adapter
Tags: 2.0R > 300Mbps > Adapter > TEW623PI > TRENDnet > Version > Wireless
Tags: 2.0R > 300Mbps > Adapter > TEW623PI > TRENDnet > Version > Wireless
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3 Responses to “TRENDnet 300Mbps Wireless N PCI Adapter ( TEW-623PI Version 2.0R)”
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October 25th, 2009 @ 7:08 pm
Works well, good speed, connected to a trendnet “N” router. The only thing that you should know is that it does not appear to be configurable using a “hidden” SSID. I had to broadcast the SSID, configure the card, ensure that the feature was active that tells the card to connect to the network even if it’s not broadcasting, and then hid the SSID on my router. It’s a big of a quirk, but easily worked around. The price can’t be beat!
October 25th, 2009 @ 7:30 pm
I called tech support to try and get this issue fixed, but they kept giving me the runaround. Most users state that they get somewhere close to 300Mbps, but I’m not even close to that. Decent buy if you just need plain old wireless. Terrible ping for gaming as well.
October 25th, 2009 @ 8:47 pm
Running on a Windows XP machine, this TRENDnet Wireless N PCI Adapter seems to work very well. Physical installation of the card was a little annoying because of the odd triangle shape of the card (pressing down on an angled surface tends to distrubute the force on an angle rather than straight down), but once in place I haven’t experienced any problems.
I did attempt to run this card with only installing the drivers and not installing TRENDnet’s own wireless configuration software, but I couldn’t get it to connect to my Linksys Wireless-N router like that. I had to install the wireless configuration software that came with it to get it functional. Once the software was installed, I configured my encryption keys, and I was up and running in no time.
This little card seems to pick up a few more surrounding wireless networks than my old Netgear G card. For the price and quality, I’d recommend this card to folks looking for a decent wireless PCI card on the cheap.