

The only way to get the adaptor back online would be to disable the adaptor, disconnect it with the manual switch on the PC and then stop the WLAN Autoconfig service, then turn it all back on in reverse sequence. But when I rebuilt the machine with Windows 7 (Vista R2) It had all kinds of problems keeping the wifi adaptor running. It ran smooth with no errors or problems.

Now this had never occurred under Windows Vista SP2.

The even log would have 30 errors all being reported by the wifi driver NETwLv64. My wifi adaptor would stop working for no apparent reason. I too experienced a similar problem, same hardware running on a Dell M4300 with the latest 13.3 drivers. I've googled these event IDs, but sadly, only unanswered questions come up. The specified resource type cannot be found in the image fileĪny help would be greatly appreciated, even saying what these mean would be great, since I'd have a chance to maybe work out the problem. The following information was included with the event: If the event originated on another computer, the display information had to be saved with the event. You can install or repair the component on the local computer. Either the component that raises this event is not installed on your local computer or the installation is corrupted. The description for Event ID from source NETwLv64 cannot be found. Unfortunately, the only text related to these is : Their source is NETwLv64 (which I believe is the 4965 driver file) and the event ID is either 5005 (only a few) or 5002 (a bunch). There are very mysterious entries in the Windows System Event Log that seem to correlate with the disconnections. The only thing that helps is a reboot - after this, everything is back to normal operation again. Disconnecting and reconnecting to the network doesn't seem to work at all. The operating system reports that I'm still connected to the network, though, but I'm not able to ping any computer on the network or the router, let alone anything on the Internet. I'm experiencing very strange disconnections happenning at random points of time. The card is connected to a 802.11n wireless network, operating in a 20MHz channel in the 2.4GHz band, run by a TP-Link TL-WR1043N router. The version of the drivers (as reported by the Device Manager) is 13.3.0.137. I'm using my Intel 4965AGN wireless card on a Windows 7 Professional 圆4 system.
