








🚀 Upgrade Your Connection, Upgrade Your Life!
The Ubit WiFi Card 6E delivers ultra-fast tri-band WiFi 6E speeds up to 5400Mbps with Intel AX210 chipset, Bluetooth 5.2 support, and advanced encryption for secure, low-latency wireless connectivity. Designed for easy PCIe installation with versatile bracket options, it’s compatible with Windows 10/11 and both Intel and AMD systems—ideal for professionals demanding seamless streaming, gaming, and productivity.















| ASIN | B07XM6XZ1F |
| Best Sellers Rank | #48 in Internal Computer Networking Cards |
| Brand | Ubit |
| Color | Intel WiFi6e 5400Mbps+BT5.2(heat sink) |
| Compatible Devices | Desktop, Keyboard, Mouse |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 out of 5 stars 5,986 Reviews |
| Data Link Protocol | Bluetooth, USB |
| Data Transfer Rate | 2400 Megabits Per Second , 2974 Megabits Per Second, 574 Megabits Per Second |
| Hardware Interface | Bluetooth, PCI |
| Item Weight | 4.8 ounces |
| Manufacturer | Ubit |
| Mfr Part Number | GuangDa |
| Model Number | AX200 |
| Unit Count | 1 Count |
| Warranty Description | 2 year manufacturer's warranty, 45 days return policy |
A**E
Ubit? Ubetcha!
I can't give this thing enough compliments. This wifi adapter saved my PC from being locked forever to 2.4Ghz, due to my built-in wifi card's 5Ghz failing this year. The Ubit 6E wifi card uses the Intel AX210 Chipset, which is standard across the board for WiFi 6E adapters, so know going in you are getting the best of the best chip. The rest of the card is built well, and have a premium look to it, thanks to the generously sized heatsink built on top of the intel chip. Also included in the card is a bluetooth 5.2 transmitter, which is a generous and great addition I didn't think I needed at first. The bluetooth portion does require an open USB 2.0 9Pin header, however, so know that going in. But if you don't need the bluetooth part, the wifi portion works just fine off the PCI-E connection. The wifi radio symbol on the card itself lights up red, which is a fun addition. The 2 antenna's that attach to the card feel very premium, and actually do leagues better than a separate antenna I bought last year that was meant for longer reach. Installation of the Wi-Fi and Bluetooth drivers was easy. There is a disk included with drivers, however I would recommend you just download the updated intel AX210 drivers from the internet right away. If you can't, then install off the disk first. Then run a windows update, and it should automatically grab the current drivers. If not, after Windows checks for updates, see if there is an "Optional Updates" button underneath the option to check for Windows Updates. There you should find the Wi-Fi and Bluetooth drivers that you can select. And the best part about all of this is the price. This is a literal steal at this price, considering just buying the intel AX210 chip outright costs about the same. This card is a no brainer. The screenshot of my speed is on 5Ghz, and I'm about 3 rooms (and across the house) over from my router. I get full strength signal as well, according to Windows. Something to note about the Bluetooth module. Like previously mentioned, it needs a free USB 2.0 9pin header to use. From my own experience, it will not work if you attached a splitter for the USB 2.0 9pin header. There isn't enough power when that header is split, so you'll get constant connect/disconnects on the Bluetooth. If you need a splitter, try and get a POWERED splitter. They aren't common (or cheap) but they do exist.
T**J
The best wifi ever
Short story: Words can't describe how happy I am with this product. It was super easy to install, has been reliable from the go, and insane results. Long story: I decided to do my first PC build. It is an AMD build, so, yes this card works with AMD. Well I didn't realize that wifi was a stand alone thing. I just took wifi for granted and thought it would work somehow. Yeah kind of dumb in hindsight. Well I couldn't get an ethernet to run all the way to the office so I went to best buy for their only solution. A wifi extender with ethernet slot. Well that doesn't work because the extender changes the IP address. So for 4 days I am trying to get the my computer to recognize the ethernet (it wouldn't). It was super frustrating. So it had been a week since I started my build and I haven't even got to use it on the internet. This wifi card finally comes in the mail and it is super easy to install. Plug in the bluetooth to usb wire, remove the PCIE mount, plug it in, screw it in and close her up. At first my computer didn't recognize it. I opened up the device manager and saw two "other devices" with little exclamation points. I figured this was just a driver issue and it was. Included CD into laptop, drivers onto usb drive, drive into computer. Got those drivers installed on new build and voila, perfect internet connection. I say perfect because it is the fastest I have experienced. I pay for spectrum's lowest plan which they say is 60mbs but I usually get like 20mbs on all my other devices. So to see over 100mbs was real exciting. And now I am having fun just opening random pages because it is so fast. Serious props to ubit. One consideration for others. The bluetooth to usb is a little short. Definitely workable for most builds but if you have an open slot on the opposite side of your motherboard you may need a longer wire for this or to reroute another device. I wont down star for this because I did not run into any problems myself.
C**Y
Great Dual Band WIFI (& Bluetooth) running latest WIFI-6 standards. NEEDS SPARE INTERNAL PC USB SITE
My old DELL XPS 8500 only had a 2.4 GHZ WIFI mini-card on the motherboard. I wanted the 5.8 GHZ band in order to be able to make full use of my existing dual band router and other dual-band home networked devices. Had one spare PCIE motherboard slot so went ahead and got this WIFI card to give me more connectivity options and higher improved WIFI data rates (latest spec: IEEE802.x aka WIFI-6). Was a straightforward hookup but ran into one "gotcha". This card's Bluetooth function needs a spare PC internal motherboard USB cable connection site and my DELL PC was already using all the internal connection sites. So I had to work around that issue of no spare internal USB connection heads. BTW, it would be nice if this card offered an external USB connection cable and external USB port for cases like this. That would preempt this scenario since one can just plug in the Bluetooth functionality by hooking up to a back-of-PC external USB port (my PC has 4 spare external slots in the rear). I ended up buying an inexpensive internal USB splitter/hub ($7: e.g. TGOOD's "9-pin USB Header Male 1 to 2 Female Extension Splitter Cable Connector Adapter"). That was a 5 minute job to install that internal USB splitter - the small PCB containing a few ops amp drivers and signal conditioners just adheres to the internal chassis wall. This approach made it easy to keep all the USB cabling internal to the PC chassis without having to resort to splicing in my own wire harness etc. After powering on and loading drivers and activating the new card with login info it connected right up to my home WIFI network router. I got great performance right up to max speed of my IP provider's hard-wired Modem data-rate. Bluetooth worked like a champ too - so stepped up to the latest standards for Bluetooth as well. Great little upgrade for older PC's not having the latest WIFI spec'd dual band and Bluetooth capability. Newer PC models should all soon be offering WIFI-6 soon as standard equipment.
W**E
Works - but needs work and might have issues!
I bought more than a pair of Bluetooth dongles for my Optiplex SFF 3020. For some reason the WiFi dongles are good, but the bluetooth ones die after a few months. So wanted to try this one, hoping it would also free-up the USB ports. The items works as advertised, but you will need the USB headers available on the Motherboard in order to get all of the functionality. The WiFi is straight affair and it works plug and play as long as you install it right and install the intel drivers. For my Optiplex it was a bit more complicated for my Bluetooth since it only had one front panel IO port which can be interchangeably used as the USB header, which meant i had to take out the Front IO connections if i wanted to use the Bluetooth. Bought a USB header splitter on Amazon - technically add an extra USB header to accommodate both the front IO and the new bluetooth connector from this Item. The bluetooth works fine with the setup of extra header, but with a caveat - the boot sequence throws a cable error though the Bluetooth and the front io cable works fine - the extra pair on the frontpanel calls out an error. I did some research and found its not fixable unless i connect back the front io back to its original port. Might be an issue only with the optiplex, so i'd say this works fine - can try out in a regular box which doesn't have the Dell SFFs limitations. Except for that the rest is good - over a week, i just hit the F1 everytime i reboot, but other than that the bluetooth and wifi stay fine. Took out the star for the missing info - its difficult to gather this info unless you are an experienced hand and most people end up buying an item like this expecting this to be a dummy job with just plug and play! Long term - not sure yet - but hoping it won't die on me before the optiplex dies! :)
C**J
Best wifi card I've had so far
First of all, my computer runs on a 64-bit Windows 10 OS. I previously used an Intel Dual Band WiFi AC 7260 card, which I bought a few years ago for a little under $30, and it worked well on occasion, giving me my maximum subscribed internet speeds when it could catch the 5GHz band, which was about 20% of the time. The speed sometimes depended on where I placed the wire antennas on my desktop tower, but it was always frustrating whenever those pesky wires popped off the card, which happened all the time because they are so small and non secured. After making some general hardware upgrades, I decided to get a new WiFi card, and I chose this Ubit AX WiFi 6 card, which I bought for just about $30 (so a few bucks more expensive than my last card). I was initially skeptical, despite all the overall positive reviews. I read some of the occasional strongly negative reviews, and I noticed the spelling error in the Amazon post (e.g., "Suport"). I know there are many companies that buy reviews (typically offering customers Amazon credit if they give the review 5-stars), so I suspected this might be another example. However, I still purchased it, since Amazon has a great return policy. I received the package undamaged, and it contained the WiFi card, compatible screws, the screw-on antennas, an installation guide, a drivers installation mini-CD, and a bracket for the computer case. The installation guide was also prone to grammatical issues, but easy to understand. However, I just easily popped the card into an available PCIe slot, screwed on the antennas, and booted up my computer. I did not use the drivers installation CD, nor did I need to download or update any drivers, and the card basically worked out of the box. Even though the antennas protrude slightly on the back of my mini-tower, it's not much of an issue, as it's somewhat inconspicuous (especially compared to the huge rabbit ears for other more expensive WiFi cards), and it's much more secure than my previous antenna wires. And ever since I installed the card, I've been consistently experiencing my maximum download and upload speeds (approx. 400-450 Mbps DL and 15-25 Mbps UL). Because of the ease of use and quality of the product, I definitely recommend it. A few caveats: I have not tested out the Bluetooth capabilities yet (I don't really have anything to test with at the moment), and I've only been using this for several days so far. I use an ASRock microATX motherboard with an Intel i7-7700 processor (a bit outdated, but still performs great). I use a Google Nest router, and my desktop is located in an adjacent room to the router. So your experience and performance may vary depending on your situation.
K**A
Upgrades older mobos, and enables Miracasting on Win10 PC
Bought this for my dad's old-ish motherboard which wasn't wifi or bluetooth capable, and because dad wanted to be able to Miracast from his PC to his smart TV. This wifi card was super easy to install: just dropped it into the PCIE port, plugged it into a USB port on the motherboard, and installed the drivers. Remember to install the drivers yourself from the Intel website (instructions on how to do this are in the item description above). After updating my dad's wifi, bluetooth, and video drivers, we were able to connect to my dad's smart TV using this wifi card. We haven't had any connectivity issues so far, but the modem isn't too far away so our signal strength is good.
J**I
This card solved all my WiFi problems
I had issues with a computer in my house and tried a number of solutions, including a USB-adapter based Wi-Fi adapter that lasted 2 weeks and an attempt to hard-wire some Cat6 (which proved impossible due to the location of the computer and the router.. And I have the floor holes to prove it..). Then, i got this adapter. I needed the Wifi, but not really the bluetooth. It seemed pretty straight-forward and, sure enough it was. I had a slot for it, and a USB connection on the motherboard. I got more than I wanted at a price that was competitive for just the Wifi I wanted. (ASUS, I'm looking at you.. Love your motherboards and AURA technology, but your quality Wifi cards need to drop in price). After about a week of use, here's my findings. Signal - 5 Stars - The signal is great. It goes through two old plaster/lathe walls to hit a node on my mesh without any problems. The Signal Strength RIGHT NOW is -57 dBm, more than enough for Video / Web Browsing / etc. Best signal I've ever had among all of my previous attempts. Installation - 4 Stars - I found it easy. If i was rating for only me, I'd give it five stars. However, finding a USB connection on a motherboard might not be easy for some people. With some YouTube videos, it might be more helpful.. Or if you had a larger case without things being crammed in it. Still, even people who are not comfortable inside their computer can do this pretty easy. I'll stand by my 4 star rating. Tech Support - 5 Stars - I have them 5 stars because the directions were very easy for me to follow. Things 'just worked' right after the install. I didn't even have to use the driver disk that came with it. I think I'd have no problem with them if needed to call support. I'll update this review / rating if time progress and negative things start happening. But, I really feel like it is right this time.
J**E
screws you
nice and easy setup… until i got to the screws. maybe it’s user error. i dont know. i tested every pcie hole i had and the screws would barely get in before they either stopped (spare hole) or spun in place (the hole i needed). i had my computer on its side. i did check and the threads on the screw already in place seemed a tad bigger. on that note, the instructions are ATROCIOUS. if you need them: personally i put in the bluetooth part into the card first, then orient it with the metal bar on the pcie cover you may have just pried off (i used pliers). it should fit nicely. i recommend a dedicated flashlight. connect the bluetooth to the motherboard. then use the screws to make sure its secure and hope to god you don’t have to resort to hot glue like i did. im not very tech savvy and hot glue was all i had on hand. i fiddled for an hour with these forsaken screws, so i was over it. it’s secure enough. thankfully its lightweight. i can only hope there wont be an issue in the future from this decision. download intel 6E 210X, thank you to the other reviewer who mentioned it because ive lost the tiny instruction pamphlet at this point. i cant attest to the actual wifi, im sure its fine. i’ll update this review if i have an issue.
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