Have a new 'high quality' notebook.
Everything is going great, I just had to realize that the internet under Wi-Fi is extremely slow.
With all other devices in the house it is great.
Speedtest gives 5.700kbit / s over Lan 60.000 kbit / s
In my old notebook about Wi-Fi about 50,000 kbit / s
Anyone ideas what it could be? Updates are currently not available
Sometimes really bad modules are installed. Only a new WLAN module helps.
But this is a gaming notebook, I can't imagine that there was something cheap built there. Had rather thought of drivers or the like
Times settings compared with the old notebook?
Fixed IP and not using DHCP?
Same location as old laptop?
Same location, settings are standard
Sorry, "gaming" anyone can say and write, moreover, this is not a feature that the components are good and who uses LAN uses and not Wi-Fi.
But that's not it, I've got a very good office notebook with a really trolligen WLAN card (NEW), I had to swap, constant crashes.
But now to your WLAN problem, have you ever tried to use the 2.4 GHz network or the 5 GHz network (but has a poor range)? Also calm the channel by 2 places up or down.
WLAN drivers you have probably up to date, as well as chipset drivers.
Sometimes they also slammed something during assembly and badly attached the antenna cable to the WLAN module.
The last would still be that the BIOS may need an update (I think less, but everything is possible).
I tried the following again. I connected a devolo powerline adapter to my wireless router.
The Wi-Fi over this devolo network works perfectly. 50,000 kbit / s with the same range. Since it has something to do with the router, where I do not understand why then all other devices in the house (2x notebook, 1x TV, 1 x Playstation) work
You're right, that's very strange.
Have you ever tested it with the 2.4GHz and 5 GHz?
Unfortunately, I do not know how to do that
In your router, you probably have 2 settings, 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi and 5 GHz Wi-Fi… You can call eg the SSID son "MyHome 5GHz" and "MyHome 2GHz"… So you have 2 defined networks that are visible as SSID… Then you can connect to the respective network.