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Rating: 
List Price: unavailable
Sale Price: $29.99
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
The TL-WN851N Wireless N PCI Adapter complies with IEEE 802.11n, IEEE 802.11g, and IEEE 802.11b standards. Wireless transmission rates can reach up to 300Mbps. The PCI card employs MIMO technology and has two external detachable omni directional antennas providing even better wireless performance, transmission rates, stability and coverage. At the same time, CCA technology automatically avoids channel conflicts using its channel selection feature. This product supports 64/128/152-bit WEP encryptions, as well as WPA/WPA2 and WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK encryptions and mechanisms in addition to the adapter's QSS (Quick Secure Setup) feature, allowing users to quickly and easily configure wireless security. This product can also simultaneously operate bandwidth intensive applications such as voice and video. Applications using a lot of bandwidth that are sensitive to interruptions such as voice and video applications are given priority in order to assure quality. It also works well with other 11g and 11n protocol wireless products.
Details
- Infrastructure and Ad-Hoc Adopts MIMO technology for wireless rates of up to 300Mbps Adopts CCA technology which automatically avoids channel
- Quick Secure Setup, complies with WPS for worry free wireless security Supports 64/128/152-bit WEP, complies with 128 bit WPA standard
- Simple Configuration and monitoring
- Supports Roaming technology, guaranteeing efficient wireless connections.
- Supports Windows 2000/XP/Vista OS
TP-Link
300Mbps Wireless N PCI adap.
The TL-WN851N Wireless N PCI Adapter complies with IEEE 802.11n, IEEE 802.11g, and IEEE 802.11b standards. Wireless transmission rates can reach up to 300Mbps. The PCI card employs MIMO technology and has two external detachable omni directional antennas providing even better wireless performance, transmission rates, stability and coverage. At the same time, CCA technology automatically avoids channel conflicts using its channel selection feature. This product supports 64/128/152-bit WEP encryptions, as well as WPA/WPA2 and WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK encryptions and mechanisms in addition to the adapter's QSS (Quick Secure Setup) feature, allowing users to quickly and easily configure wireless security. This product can also simultaneously operate bandwidth intensive applications such as voice and video. Applications using a lot of bandwidth that are sensitive to interruptions such as voice and video applications are given priority in order to assure quality. It also works well with other 11g and 11n protocol wireless products.
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July 27th, 2010 on 9:12 pm
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This card was installed in a second PC to connect it to our Wireless N network. It installed easily and works fine.
July 30th, 2010 on 8:58 am
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i get decent reception all over my one story house, installs easily. if you are using vista and get a blue screen of death, as i did, download the beta drivers from their website and it should work just fine. works flawlessly on xp. will be ordering another one for my older desktop.
July 31st, 2010 on 2:08 pm
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This card cost about half of what they were charging at retail stores. I installed quickly and easily and it has worked without any problems ever since.
August 1st, 2010 on 3:57 pm
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The software which came with the card would not recognize that the card was installed, so I called the support line. The tech was very knowledgeable, but had a very strong Chinese accent, and several times I had to ask her to repeat a sentence.
Without the software, there is no way to get the MAC address of the card. As silly as it sounds, it is not printed anywhere on the card or literature. I had to turn off MAC filtering, connect, and then get the MAC address form the router. I then added the address to the filter, and re-enabled MAC filtering… a hassle which should not be necessary.
The card has functioned very well, and has a full signal from my ‘n’ router from ~40 feet.
August 1st, 2010 on 7:03 pm
Rating
Althought the installation was a bit frustrating on an XP machine since the software that came with it did not allow it to be recognized by the OS, I managed to get it going after a while by using the Windows utilities. I almost gave up and sent it back, but since I got it to work, it stays. I have a D-Link G-level USB wireless on one of my other seven systems and it seems to work well. I would have fallen back on that tried and true adapter in the case I had to send this new one back.