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Maybe I should go back to a WiFi-n board that was famous for being ultra-reliable and use that for testing.īTW, the current version of my AMD drivers is:ĪMD GPIO Controller: 2.2.0.126 () <- I think this was provided by Windows Update since I force-uninstalled the entire AMD Chipset Drivers package a week or so ago.ĪMD PSP 3.0 Device: 4.4.0.0 () <- definitely provided by Windows Update because it had no driver at all after the force-uninstall of the AMD Chipset Drivers. (Gigabyte's implementation of the Intel AX200 module.) The problem is that there aren't many choices for WiFi 6 modules right now. But it is also a laptop module on an adapter board. Well, I'm going to try the other hypothesis by ordering yet another WiFi adapter. You just saved me an expensive experiment (and that blows away the hypothesis about distances and electrical signals). I've even got a fourth brand new NIC on order to try in the last PCI-e slot, hoping that it fixes the problem (but it probably won't-three NICs didn't work, why would a fourth one?) Am still trying things out to pin it down. I have not figured out what other driver(s) to uninstall or update or downgrade to get it to where my system just works all the time with the WiFi+Bluetooth NIC in the last PCI-e slot. I still get the failure after uninstalling the Ryzen Power Plan, just a lot less often.
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Note that I have discovered that the Ryzen Power Plan 5.0.0.0 is not the only thing that causes the USB 3.10 eXtensible Host Controller to fail. The list of features is at the bottom of the Release Notes that came with the driver. exe, you can run a command in the same directory like so: If you still have the original installer. Both cards cause the same frequent failures of the AMD USB 3.10 eXtensible Host Controller.ĭifferent from your case, my AMD USB 3.0 eXtensible Host Controller does not fail. I had the same problem with two different WiFi cards, one brand new ASUS PCE-AC58BT and one older but highly reliable Intel 5100AGN card. If I enable the WiFi card and use it to connect to the network, then the AMD USB 3.10 eXtensible Host Controller fails very frequently. If the WiFi card is disabled, the crash of the AMD USB 3.10 eXtensible Host Controller happens less frequently (maybe once a month). I have noticed that I can cause the error to occur more frequently when I install and use a PCI-e WiFi card. Usually the BSOD goes by so fast I cannot read the error code at the bottom. Sometimes it just fails without BSOD, and sometimes it fails with BSOD and a very quick automatic reboot. The AMD USB 3.10 eXtensible Host Controller keeps failing. I have the exact same motherboard (ASUS TUF B450-Plus) and almost the exact same error.
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