gcrump

Q: WiFi Issues With MacBook Air

I am about two weeks in to my new Macbook Air and love it except for the wifi. I have had five or six other Mac laptops in the past five years including the original air. I can confirm that there are some wifi issues with the Macbook Air. Based on the messages posted here and my experience here is where I am. I think if it is a "N" network it seems to work fine. I have never had an issue with my Airport Extreme at my house or my Dad's Linksys at his house which is also an N. This also I think resolves the "is it an ISP" issue, since they are distinctly different ISP's and these both work perfectly.

My problems are on non-N's it seems. I travel a lot so I hit a lot of guest networks which are almost always "g". These networks I can generally find and attach to them but not get a consistent internet connection. With these networks I have found that turning the airport on/off and refreshing the IP address does not work. Again I can connect to the browser, in most cases get what appears to be a valid IP but not gain any internet access. I have found that a power down and reboot AFTER attaching to the network (but not getting the internet connection) will then give me a steady and consistent connection.

I need to do some more testing and I guess traveling to pin down some of these things but I wanted to share what I have found thus far, but I definitely think there is a problem with the wifi on the new MacBook Air's.

Thanks,

Macbook Pro and iMac 27" and iPad and iPhone and MacBook Air 2010, Mac OS X (10.6.5)

Posted on Nov 28, 2010 6:10 AM

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Q: WiFi Issues With MacBook Air

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  • by John Storhm,

    John Storhm John Storhm Oct 12, 2014 4:26 PM in response to gcrump
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    Oct 12, 2014 4:26 PM in response to gcrump

    We have a lot of Macbook Air 2013 models and we do not experience this issue on all of them.  But periodically I will hear from users that they have unreliable WIFI on their Air.  The waking from sleep, especially when the lid is opened, rather than a sleep where the computer is just in screen saver, seems to be less reliable and more prone to the WIFI not powering back up properly.  Along these lines I have noticed that users who leave their Macbook Air closed and connected to an external Apple thunderbolt display experience this problem regularly.  It seems like the sleep when the lid is closed forces the WIFI card into some very low power mode that it does not reliably recover from.  Has anyone else noticed that using an external monitor and leaving your Macbook Air's lid closed causes these WIFI connection issues more frequently?

  • by CoachGrump,

    CoachGrump CoachGrump Oct 23, 2014 6:43 PM in response to gcrump
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    Oct 23, 2014 6:43 PM in response to gcrump

    I have MBA 13in Mid 2013. I pull up Airport Utility and watch. About every min to two min I see the connection drop. I thought it was my old Time Machine. So I go out and buy the new one. Same issue. So I change over to an old Linksys wireless router I had laying around. Same issue. My wife also has a MBA. I have not looked at her connection to see if it drops or not. With my two Time Machines I also have 3 AirPort Express to extend my network. My Linksys router is located pretty far from my home office. I go to school full time so I will have to see if the connection drops while I'm at school. I find it really annoying .

  • by BlueDares,

    BlueDares BlueDares Dec 23, 2014 3:12 AM in response to gcrump
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    Dec 23, 2014 3:12 AM in response to gcrump

    I've been suffering from this same.  After much gnashing of teeth (PRAM, SMC, reinstall of Yosemite, etc. etc.) I finally **RESOLVED** it by creating a new Network Location.

     

    *Under -> Network Preferences

    *Click drop-down for "Location" (Initially it'll be Automatic)

    *Create a new location.. (I called mine "Internet")

    *That's it! It started to Work

     

    hope it helps somebody !

  • by gweis99999,

    gweis99999 gweis99999 Aug 26, 2015 5:05 PM in response to gcrump
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Aug 26, 2015 5:05 PM in response to gcrump

    So I've been basically unable to use my late 2012 Macbook Air (I7, 512ssd, 8GB) for over three years because of the wifi dropping issue (which Apple says is not an "issue).  Didn't matter which OS X version I used (Snow, Yose) the **** thing wouldn't stay connected for more than a couple of seconds and then revert to "Searching....." as per usual.  I'm pretty sure I've tried every fix that was ever listed on the net to no avail.  I have full on AC wireless in my home and every other device can access pretty much wired speeds from anywhere in the house.

     

    Enter the weirdness....

     

    Since the laptop was completely useless to me (after SO many trips to the Apple store), I decided to try a demo version of Windows 10 through bootcamp.  As odd as this sounds, it now has unshakable, perfect wireless connection.  On my driveway, on my deck, anywhere in the house....  Perfect.  If I boot to the Mac OS side (I'm now on Yose), same wife problem as ever.

     

    How is it that MS can somehow load whatever driver (or whatever) is needed to get this hardware to work, but Apple can't?  I'm not a fan of Win 10, but at least I now get to appreciate the quality that was built into this $2400 boat anchor.  It's actually really enjoyable to use because of it's fantastic build quality, light weight, battery life, etc.  I'm off to buy a boxed copy of Win 8.1 tomorrow before they're all gone.

     

    Not impressed Apple.  Not even a little.

     

    (edit to add that I'm connecting on the N network side, not AC)

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