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🚀 Upgrade your network game with Intel’s Gigabit powerhouse!
The Intel Gigabit CT PCI-E Network Adapter EXPI9301CTBLK delivers reliable, high-speed 1 Gbps Ethernet connectivity via a PCI Express x1 slot. Designed for professional desktops, it features auto-negotiation for optimal speeds, low power consumption, and broad OS compatibility including Windows 7 through 11. Ideal for users seeking a hassle-free upgrade to gigabit networking with enterprise-grade stability and compact design.
| ASIN | B001CY0P7G |
| Best Sellers Rank | #153 in Internal Computer Networking Cards |
| Brand | Intel |
| Built-In Media | Low-profile bracket, Network adapter |
| Color | multicolor |
| Compatible Devices | Desktop |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 1,590 Reviews |
| Data Link Protocol | Gigabit Ethernet |
| Data Transfer Rate | 1024 Megabits Per Second |
| External Testing Certification | FCC B, UL, CE |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 05032037041546 |
| Hardware Interface | Ethernet |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 0.5"L x 0.5"W x 0.5"H |
| Item Part Number | EXPI9301CTBLK |
| Item Type Name | Intel EXPI9301CTBLK CT Desktop Adapter Network PCI Express x1 Gigabit Ethernet |
| Item Weight | 0.22 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Intel |
| Mfr Part Number | EXPI9301CTBLK |
| Model Number | EXPI9301CTBLK |
| Product Dimensions | 0.5"L x 0.5"W x 0.5"H |
| UPC | 778889080436 803982760326 675900917385 735858202176 069060235890 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | Limited warranty; limited lifetime warranty |
M**A
Upgrade from Intel PRO/100 VE Desktop Adapter
My Dell Dimension E510 desktop had the PRO/100 VE desktop adapter as its NIC, which worked just fine. I was upgrading my E510 from XP to Windows 7 and wanted a new Ethernet card so I chose the Gigabit CT Desktop Adapter. I had PROSet software installed along with the driver for the PRO/100 VE. Some helpful instructions for those that want to upgrade your driver or install a new Ethernet card; With PROSet, you must first remove your current adapter from the PROSet software BEFORE uninstalling PROSet and the current driver. If you don't you may end up with a phantom adapter that causes problems when you try to install a new version of PROSet and an updated driver. I installed the Gigabit CT card while still running XP. I had a free PCI-Express (x1) slot, which made installing the new card easy. During system startup I entered Setup and disabled the PRO/100 VE NIC and then proceeded with the rest of startup. I then installed a new version of PROSet and a new driver that I downloaded from Intel's web site. I didn't have to reboot after installing the software. The card just worked. When I upgraded from XP to Windows 7, the OS recognized the Gigabit CT card and installed drivers automatically so I didn't have to worry about downloading and installing a driver after installing the OS. The only thing is that Windows 7 didn't install PROSet, which is optional software anyway so it's not required. My house is wired with CAT5 instead of CAT5e or CAT6 so I really don't get the benefit of having a Gigabit network adapter. My VPN router is not a Gigabit router. It's only rated at 75Mbps. With my current Comcast service I'm getting about 25Mbps download and 4Mbps upload, which is about the same as I was getting with the PRO/100 VE NIC so having a Gigabit card isn't making any difference for me. However, the card works flawlessly and I'm very pleased with it. If you're wired with CAT5e or CAT6 and have Gigabit network equipment I would highly recommend the CT Desktop Adapter. It's a great Ethernet card, easy to install, works with Windows 7, and it provides great performance even in a non-Gigabit environment. You can download the latest PROSet and driver from Intel's web site.
R**N
Works like a charm for your "my MB's Ethernet controller is crappy and disconnects" problem
Slide into the slot, power up your PC, done. Works reliably with no issues. Tested separately on both Windows 10 and Windows 11. No driver installation necessary on either OS. Therefore, lack of official continued support from Intel for this strictly speaking outdated device is not an issue at all. I haven't tested Linux just yet, but IIRC recommendations for this Intel device, it's a very common and well-established controller which routinely has a ubiquitous support in Linux as well. Got it to solve my "Oh, apparently, MSI MPG B550 GAMING CARBON WIFI board has a crappy Ethernet controller (LAN), namely Realtek RTL8125B (2.5Gbps), which has a known, documented on forums, and admitted by Realtek IIRC, unsolvable-in-SW hardware bug for 1 Gbps mode that all the so-called review media failed to mention, which results in the board regularly (2 times a day?) dropping the connection when it's running 1 Gbps, 1/3 of the time not restoring at all, 2/3 of the time silently restoring itself to 100 Mbps mode" problem, with the only known workarounds being either rebooting the device or physically unplugging and plugging in back the Ethernet cable. My only dislike is that it's a bit expensive for what it is, but I gather, resellers know why people are after these bad boys (see the above - Realtek RTL8125B is a commonly used 2.5 Gbps controller present in other boards as well, and I have little doubt there are other LAN controllers out there that are just as faulty as well), so they drive the price up, either intentionally or just mechanically based on the supply/demand analytics. Can't really do anything about it...
A**P
Works Great
I felt I needed to install a new subnet to run older Windows OSes. The networking software products I sell run on everything from Windows 95 to Windows 7, so a new release of my software has to be qualified against older, vulnerable OSes. Yes, I do have customers running Windows 98 and 2000. Now that XP will no longer be supported as of April of 2014, I decided to isolate the older OSes from the rest of the network. Because of the nature of the products I sell, I could not simply install a $20 router to NAT the subnet. Linux allows a single NIC to handle multiple IP Addresses, but that left me with an Ethernet collision domain that overlapped IP Subnets. That works, but not without occasional complaints. The Linux CentOS that I run gives me relatively powerful tools to route and firewall a subnet. I went looking for an inexpensive NIC that I could install on a open slot in my server, preferably a PCI Express x1 slot. I strongly preferred a gigabit NIC to speed up network backups. BTW, the test OSes all run as VMware or VirtualBox guests on host PCs that do support gigabit NICs. This NIC fit my needs, so I ordered it from Amazon where I am a Prime member. The NIC arrived a day early. It went into the server with no problems and was working within 30 minutes. I am very pleased with the Amazon service and the Intel NIC's performance. Price is fine. Amazon Prime convenience is wonderful. I have had the NIC installed for less than a day, but I do have a great deal of experience with Intel NICs so I am expecting that the device will work for years. If this NIC does not live up to those expectations, I'll update this review.
G**3
For Issues With Microsoft Toredo Tunneling Adapter Errors
I replaced my Network card after having numerous problems with my original card. My computer is an older HP Pavillion with Microsoft 7 as the operating software. I had a difficult time connecting to the Internet. When It was suggested by one of the troubleshooters that I replace my card, I started digging a little deeper. I found that my Microsoft Toredo Tunneling Adapter would keep giving a Code 10 when I accessed my Device Manager. I tried to update the driver from Microsoft's website, to no avail. After dozens of tries, I just could not fix the Code 10 error. So, I ordered this Network Card as a replacement. The product did, indeed, work. I was able to open my computer easily. The slot where the card was to go was found easily. However, my overall satisfaction would have been a five if there were some printed instructions and a disk for a driver. The card will need to have access to the Internet to ensure the latest driver is available. Thank goodness mine was working somewhat okay that day. After installing the new card and turning the computer on, I was satisfied to see the computer add the device automatically. It accessed the Internet for the latest driver. All told, the process took about ten minutes. Besides the lack of instructions and the lack of a disk for drivers, I was not satisfied with Amazon's delivery process. This has happened to me on numerous occasions before. When tracking the item through Amazon, they didn't give me a clear way to track the item through USPS. They didn't deliver on the date they advertised through tracking. I am seriously considering not using Amazon anymore simply because of delivery, what I call, bungles.
D**.
Solid, reliable and fast.
I bought this because I was having issues with my motherboards Killer network connection. Google anything on them and you'll see I'm not alone by any means. That's what I did as I fought with it from the start. Got this and turned the Killer off in the BIOS and have never looked back. The difference is startlingly clear as the many delays and problems I was having simply went away. Windows has a driver for it already so it really is plug and play at it's simplest. I also recently updated both my cable modem and Wi-Fi router and this has been right there with no issues and at top speed. Can't say enough about how well it works compared to what I had before. And the price is super cheap as well.
C**Y
Cheap. Works. Great NIC from Intel.
I run an unRAID system and purchased one of these because I kept having lock ups/crashes while transferring data. It seemed to only occur when running very large transfers and I got the feeling it had something to do with the Realtek NIC on the motherboard. I picked one of these up and installed it and haven't really had an issue since (there were some hiccups but I think the problem also stemmed from some poorly setup shares). Anyways, if you need a second NIC this is a great choice. However you might want to get the regular PCI version (I'm wishing that I did). The bandwidth on a PCI slot is more than enough to support a Gigabit connection and won't take away from valuable PCIe slots that you might use for things like SAS expander cards and what not. Also, if you're running unRAID, remember that it will only notice one NIC, so if you want to use this you need to disable the onboard NIC in the BIOS.
W**E
Just works
I needed this product because the adapter on the motherboard of my Dell Vostro desktop became flakey, and was not repairable without replacing the whole motherboard (the machine was only a couple of months out of warranty ... ouch). The Intel adapter was reasonably priced, easy to install, worked on first boot with Windows 7 (no additional driver installation required), and has been trouble-free. BTW, when purchasing expansion cards, it's important to actually open your PC and confirm the architecture of the available slots. Foolishly, I did not do this the first time around, and ordered a PCI card, not realizing that this machine had no PCI slot! This whole area is confusing (there are multiple types of PCI-E slots), so best to research carefully ahead of time. Retailers like Amazon good give better guidance/warnings for this compatibility issue.
B**B
Card is Cat5e using Cat6 cable getting 700 Mbps average, awesome...
Intel Gigabit CT PCI-E network adapter When I built two of the same systems back in 2013 along with this card, I never actually used this Cat5e card until 2021. I was lazy and was using Wifi dual band USB adapters and then the built-in mobo 2.4 Wifi, overtime, all started having intermittent connection issues or completely stopped working. I've always planned to connect the desktops via hard wire and finally did in early 2021 using Cat6 flat cable made by "Jadaol", when the final Wifi was on it's last leg. I have a 600 Mbps plan, when using Wifi, in my environment, I typically get an average of 50Mbps with 2.4Ghz, 5Ghz was 260Mbps, when they were working. Once I hard wired the systems with this card, now both systems are getting an average of 700Mbps. Cards working as they should from current my experience, no regrets. It was a plug n play (currently running Windows 10).
M**R
Qualität zahlt sich aus
Nach viel Ärger mit On-Board-LAN war ein Wechsel der NICs von Nöten, und nach ein wenig Suche im WWW bin ich irgendwan bei den CT-Desktop Karten von Intel hängen geblieben. Laut Reviews auf div. Seiten sollten diese problemlos und vergleichsweise schnell arbeiten, was mir bei bisher maximal 12 MiB/s und regelmäßigen Verbindungseinbrüchen mit den Onboard-Lö- sungen mehr als zusagte. Frühere Versuche mit Realtek-basierten Karten waren auch in die Hose gegangen, sei es durch die gleichen Probleme wie mit Onboard-LAN, oder, wie im Fall von 3 bau- gleichen Realtek PCIe-GBit-Karten (in 3 Rechnern) mit dem zeitgleichen Ableben 1 Woche nach Einbau (bei auch max. 12 MiB/s wohlgemerkt). Die Intel-Karten haben derweil die Wochenfrist überlebt und überzeugen mit 50-80 MiB/s je nach Dateigröße und -mischung und bisher 100%iger Stabilität. Es sind keine Einstellungen nötig, die Karten müssen nur eigebaut werden, Treiber von Intel installieren (nicht dabei, muss runtergeladen werden) und fertig. Einziger Nachteil, unter Vista gibt es keine Standarttreiber, d.h. die Karten laufen nicht ohne externen Treiber. Den sollte man also runterladen, bevor man den Onboardkram ausschaltet. Fazit: Die Intel Karten kosten das 2-3fache anderer GBit-Lösungen, belohnen aber mit etwa 5-8fachen Datenrate im Vergleich zu Onboard-LAN (hier 2x Gigabyte mit P35 und X58 Chipsatz, 1x Zotac nVidia ION) bzw. anderen günstigen NICs. Kaufen, Einbauen, Freuen - die Dinger sind es wert.
S**.
Alternate NIC for Asrock J4105 mobo
I used it for a Asrock J4105 mini ITX mobo and works straight out of the box. Speed is better than the Realtek 8111 on board lan and synology updates do not break my NAS
H**B
Excellent piece of kit!
I have a brand new high performance PC with an i7 intel processor, 32 Mb ram, a high performance Gigabyte motherboard, SSD and a high end video and sound card that is running Win 7 x64 which I built. After some issues with my network connection developed I decided to look into the possibility of a separate network port card as I didn't want to have to take my computer apart again to extract the motherboard I did some research and identified that I would be better to purchase a more expensive but higher performance network card that matched the rest of my system. I was hoping it would resolve my networking issues, but I wasn't expecting a performance boost on log on our loading we pages given the performance of the rest of my PC hardware. How wrong I was! Initial log onto network is now almost instantaneous and web pages load perceptibly faster. It didn't resolve the networking issues I was experiencing as this turned out to be a router issue. However, I'm still very pleased I have invested in this network card due to the performance increase it delivers and intel have provided updated drivers/ tools for it that enable you to run both hardware and network cable checks to assist in fault finding etc. If you want to increase the performance of your PC I definitely recommend investing in this quality high performance network card.
L**E
Molto buona !
Prodotto di qualità con rapporto prezzo/prestazioni ottimo. Arriva in confezione bulk, installata su Win 8.1 64bit, riconosciuta ed installata senza problemi automaticamente dal sistema operativo. Sono andato su impostazioni scheda, fatto "Aggiorna driver" si è pure installato in automatico un aggiornamento da Windows Update. Prodotto con data di fabbricazione di GEN2015, quindi recentissima, non è il classico fondo di magazzino lasciato li aspettando che qualcuno lo compri. Il chipset Intel garantisce poi prestazioni elevate (2 code simultanee in RX e TX). Per dettagli sulla scheda, direttamente dal sito del costruttore : [...]
G**D
Great Product
Do the job , easy to install
Trustpilot
4 days ago
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