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Where did my network card go!?

Joined
Dec 5, 2007
Messages
5,226 (0.81/day)
System Name Addison Clark
Processor Ryzen 9 7950x3D delid
Motherboard Asus X670E Hero
Cooling Custom Bykski loop CPU, GPU, 2x 360 rads, and 1x 280 rad with Arctic P12 and P14 ARGB fans
Memory G.Skill DDR5-6000 64GB CL30
Video Card(s) Gigabyte 4090 Aorus Master
Storage Kingston Fury 2TB and 4TB NVME
Display(s) Samsung 57"
Case Lian Li O11 mini
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply Thermaltake 1000w SFX-L
Mouse Corsair Dark Core RGB SE
Keyboard Corsair K95 Platnium
Software Win 11 Pro
Ok, as you can see I have XP 32-bit and Vista x64 on my system. Mon morning I turned on the system and I couldn't get on the internet. Went to scan for the router and no option. Checked device manager in both OS's and not D-Link Wireless N card listed. Removed the driver from XP, removed the card, rebooted, reinstalled the card, and no message about found new hardware. I took the card to work and it worked fine, actually better than at home. Moved the sound card to the PCI slot the network card was in and it was redetected. Installed the network card to the other PCI slot and still no Dlink Wireless N card showing up. Anyone seen or fixed this issue before?
 
I'm going to place money on the card kicked the bucket.
 
Why then would the card work fine in two systems at work?
 
Why then would the card work fine in two systems at work?

I didn't catch that part. I'm stumped. Maybe it's an IRQ setting. Or, the drivers have become corrupt, and when you tried re-installing the drivers, they won't install correctly, from the old ones.
 
check to see if card is in properly, the slightest misalignment can cause it to not work.
also i would try another pci slot, to see if that works, if not. another device is conflicting as tomcat said.
 
Last night I was finally able to get my card working. I don't know what I did but it is working fine now. Thanks guys for the info but not sure who to tag with a thanks because I don't know what fixed it.
 
yea, if you moved your pc. it might have just knocked something into place.
 
I just find it hard to believe that after a week of pulling it out, putting it in, trying a different slot, and then seeing the card work in other systems without a hitch; that all of a suddent that last single movement put it in place!? I'm glad it is working but I just don't get it.
 
yer pc's not only break your bank balance but the laws of reality too o_O
 
I just find it hard to believe that after a week of pulling it out, putting it in, trying a different slot, and then seeing the card work in other systems without a hitch; that all of a suddent that last single movement put it in place!? I'm glad it is working but I just don't get it.

Scan your PC. Sometimes malware or other utilities (link TCP scanners and loggers etc) can "bind" to your network card before your OS has properly set it up and obtained an IP address etc. Then the software gets stuck and the system doesnt see the network. There is ONE TRICK and that is... turn the PC on and wait a hell of a long time. Eventually the "malware" times out and the system eventually comes through with the network card.

Then you know its a startup problem. Remove the offending software.

By pulling the card, rebooting (without the card), then putting the card in a new slot, will establist a new *control set* in the registry. The "malware" in no longer "pre-bound" to the card, and you boot with network much faster.
 
I just find it hard to believe that after a week of pulling it out, putting it in, trying a different slot, and then seeing the card work in other systems without a hitch; that all of a suddent that last single movement put it in place!? I'm glad it is working but I just don't get it.

Computers can be truely bipolar.
 
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