Solved Windows 11 Laptop Taking 4 Minutes to Connect to Wireless Network


To Jim Rockford's question about the Dell "Support Assist" utility, yes, that has been run/is running on the computer in question (again, a Dell Inspiron 15 3511). It isn't my computer; it's a neighbor's/friends that I was recently helping with an SSD upgrade, and she indicated that it was "recent" that the computer started having this 4-minute delay when booting up, and I determined that it was just the wifi adapter/connection that was getting delayed. Again, everything else about the boot runs quickly. But it's just the network connection won't get established for an additional four minutes, and the computer doesn't even recognize that it has a wifi adapter (RealTek) in the system until those four minutes elapse. I used the services.msc utility to check the status of the WLAN Auto-Config service, and it was simply set to "auto" (and not the "auto-delayed start" setting), and I even checked it during that 4-minute interval on boot *before* the computer started recognizing the presence of the wifi adapter, and the WLAN service showed as enabled/running, despite no wifi adapter seeming to be present/recognized.

So it seems reasonable that the problem was introduced by a *DELL* update, as opposed to a Windows Update, but hard to be sure.

I've already tried a "network reset," with no impact. And I've turned off the "fast start" option as suggested elsewhere. And I've disabled just about all "startup" items.

I was thinking that something in AVAST Antivirus might be the culprit, but that seems to not have any impact either.

I'm still hoping that a future Dell (or Windows) update will resolve the issue. I'd rather not have to help my neighbor through a full Windows reset, and re-install of her apps.

Tom
ChatGPT, for me, was negative on 3rd party antivirus software as well as SupportAssist, or any program that makes changes anywhere "close" to the network-stack. When I was directed to reset the network, the result was a mess. Windows was unable to complete the reset process, probably because something was corrupt, and I was left with no wireless interfaces. That's what prompted the Windows Reset.

If you have time, you might try ChatGPT. The worst thing that could happen is you could end up resetting Windows. That's a PITA, but your problem would be solved.
 

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Look at the settings of your network adapter (Adapter properties, Advanced tab). You may see that some default settings are "Auto", which allows driver to select the suitable Wi-Fi band, channel width and other parameters automatically. But every action takes time.

You can set some parameters manually instead of default. After connection is established, look at the Settings > Network & internet > WiFi > <Access point name> and select the same settings in the driver. For example, Preferred Band: No preference > Prefer 5GHz band (set your preferred band here); Roaming Aggressiveness: Medium > Lowest (adapter will look rarely at other APs to check if they are be better than current), Transmit Power: Medium > High or Highest (decrease a chance that AP will spend much time to establish connection).

Another suggestion: for your personal AP, set in the Settings: Random hardware address > Off. Routers usually create the list of connected devices, but in the old models the size of such list may be limited. Also, it can be limited intentionally: how many devices may connect at the same time. If your MAC address is changed from one session to another, this list may overflow and then you will have to wait, when the router will forget the oldest entry and allow you to connect again. If your MAC is the same every time, you will not have such problem.
 

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Glad you got it sorted, I didn't want to do the network reset for you as your wifi was working and thought it would complicate things for you more, but i'm glad you are in a working state now.

When I was directed to reset the network, the result was a mess. Windows was unable to complete the reset process, probably because something was corrupt, and I was left with no wireless interfaces. That's what prompted the Windows Reset.

I wonder if device manager saw it and then would have been able to manually install the driver and it would have been fine. But starting from scratch ensures you have no windows corruption, so at least your in a pristine position now.
 

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To Slavic's suggestions about setting up the wifi parameters for the adapter, I understand what you are saying, but it's quite clear to me that the underlying "4-minute-delay" problem is *not* related to the wifi parameters that the adapter is using/trying to use. Rather, the problem really seems to be related to an underlying issue within *Windows* where the wifi adapter is not even getting *ENABLED* during that 4-minute delay. That is, upon boot up, and the desktop becoming "active," Windows does not appear to even recognize that a wifi adapter exists within the system. It doesn't even appear when you bring up the "network status" icon in the system tray. That icon shows BlueTooth, and the other normal buttons, but it doesn't recognize that there's a wifi adapter in the system. It's not an issue of the wifi adapter being there and enabled, but simply not "finding a network" or "not connecting." It's literally "not there."

Then, after a 4-minute delay, Windows finally seems to recognize/enable the wifi adapter (you set the "dynamic icon" finally show the "searching radar" animated icon, and within just a few seconds the (now-enabled) wifi adapter finds and connects to a network.

So the issue/question is, why is Windows imposing a 4-minute delay in recognizing that there's a wifi adapter in the system? And why did this suddenly start happening, without any change to the wifi adapter or its settings. Seems that the only "variable" between when the delay wasn't there to when the delay appeared was some Windows updates (but I don't have the info to be able to cite exactly *which* Windows update occurred, as again, it's not my computer and the owner couldn't say for sure exactly when it started).

Tom
 

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Lenovo ThinkPad T16 Gen 3 Type 21MN-005QUS
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Dell wired keyboard
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AVAST Basic (free)
To Slavic's suggestions about setting up the wifi parameters for the adapter, I understand what you are saying, but it's quite clear to me that the underlying "4-minute-delay" problem is *not* related to the wifi parameters that the adapter is using/trying to use. Rather, the problem really seems to be related to an underlying issue within *Windows* where the wifi adapter is not even getting *ENABLED* during that 4-minute delay. That is, upon boot up, and the desktop becoming "active," Windows does not appear to even recognize that a wifi adapter exists within the system. It doesn't even appear when you bring up the "network status" icon in the system tray. That icon shows BlueTooth, and the other normal buttons, but it doesn't recognize that there's a wifi adapter in the system. It's not an issue of the wifi adapter being there and enabled, but simply not "finding a network" or "not connecting." It's literally "not there."

Then, after a 4-minute delay, Windows finally seems to recognize/enable the wifi adapter (you set the "dynamic icon" finally show the "searching radar" animated icon, and within just a few seconds the (now-enabled) wifi adapter finds and connects to a network.

So the issue/question is, why is Windows imposing a 4-minute delay in recognizing that there's a wifi adapter in the system? And why did this suddenly start happening, without any change to the wifi adapter or its settings. Seems that the only "variable" between when the delay wasn't there to when the delay appeared was some Windows updates (but I don't have the info to be able to cite exactly *which* Windows update occurred, as again, it's not my computer and the owner couldn't say for sure exactly when it started).

Tom
Your issue, @sartor , is exactly the same as mine was, as I mentioned earlier. I'm not an expert, but what ChatGPT "told" me was that something was blocking the Windows Wlan service from running. Once it "timed out", after 4-5 minutes, it "restarted" and immediately found networks. I went through a long and winding road to try to find out what was blocking it, but eventually gave up and did the reset, as per ChatGPT. I don't know if you've checked this, but, once you're connected to wifi, what happens if you turn off, and then back on, wifi? Or similarly, if you disable and re-enable the adapter after making the connection? In my case, wifi was immediately reconnected, which rules out a lot of potential causes; e.g., it's not DNS, it's not the adapter, not the driver, etc. This restart occurs after Wlan times out.

The process I went through either caused a corruption to the network-stack or exposed one that was already there, because I eventually got to the point where windows could not find any wifi interfaces at all (my laptop does not have an ethernet connection). Earlier in this thread, someone suggested either a Windows reset or a re-installation of Windows. I chickened out on that at the time, but eventually the reset was what "fixed" the problem.

So, the $64K question continues to be what was blocking Wlan from running? ChatGPT's "best" theory ended up this way for me. Of course, YMMV:
  • Dell utility updated or interacted with networking/power components
  • A network binding or service dependency became inconsistent
  • WLAN AutoConfig began hanging during startup
  • Timeout eventually released it after ~5 minutes
  • Over time, networking metadata/bindings became increasingly corrupted
  • Deep reset attempts exposed how damaged the stack had become
 

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Dell
CPU
Processor Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-8565U CPU @ 1.80GHz, 199
Motherboard
BaseBoard Manufacturer Dell Inc. BaseBoard Product 08YRWT BaseBoard Version A00
Memory
Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 16.0 GB
Hi Jim Rockford,

Thanks for the additional tips/suggestions, and yes, I believe the problem you encountered and the one with my neighbor's computer are identical. And I agree that the notion of a "WLAN Auto-Config time-out" sure seems like a likely culprit, particularly if that's know to be about a 4-minute thing.

I'm a retired computer hardware engineer (microprocessor design), so I have decent understanding of this stuff conceptually at least, but I'm not a software engineer so I don't fully comprehend how all of these components end up interacting in the booting of a Windows laptop.

That said, one piece of potentially relevant information is that during one test, I started the boot, got to the desktop (but still during the 4-minute delay interval), went to the services.msc utility and checked the status of WLAN Auto-Config, and it was already showing as "present" or "active" (or at least it seemed that way). That is, it wasn't showing up as "disabled" in the list of services. And the setting was "Auto" (as opposed to the "Auto - delayed start" setting). So it would seem that Windows at least *thought* that the WLAN Auto-Config service was up/operational and set to the proper setting.

So not sure if that provides any "clue" to those reading this forum that understand this stuff better than I do.

And I strongly suspect that you're correct that if I did a full Windows Reset on the computer it would resolve the issue (like it did for you). But since it's not my computer, and I'm not sure how much stuff my neighbor has in the way of things that would need to get reinstalled, it's not really my call if I end up going that route. I'm still hoping that Microsoft will eventually discover that there's an underlying issue, fix it, and an upcoming Windows Update will restore proper functionality (eliminate the delay). Or, perhaps one of the contributors to this forum is aware of some way to do a "targeted reset" that just tries to "fix" the WLAN service, or the "network stack," or some other targeted fix, short of a full Windows Reset.

I appreciate all of the information you've provided!

Tom
 

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Windows 11 Pro 25H2Intel Core Ultra 7 165U 1.7GHz32GBNone (motherboard graphics)
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Windows 11 Pro 25H2
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Lenovo ThinkPad T16 Gen 3 Type 21MN-005QUS
CPU
Intel Core Ultra 7 165U 1.7GHz
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???
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HP Pavilion 25bw
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SK Hynix HFS001TEJ9X162N 1TB
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Whatever came with the Lenovo laptop
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Hi Jim Rockford,

Thanks for the additional tips/suggestions, and yes, I believe the problem you encountered and the one with my neighbor's computer are identical. And I agree that the notion of a "WLAN Auto-Config time-out" sure seems like a likely culprit, particularly if that's know to be about a 4-minute thing.

I'm a retired computer hardware engineer (microprocessor design), so I have decent understanding of this stuff conceptually at least, but I'm not a software engineer so I don't fully comprehend how all of these components end up interacting in the booting of a Windows laptop.

That said, one piece of potentially relevant information is that during one test, I started the boot, got to the desktop (but still during the 4-minute delay interval), went to the services.msc utility and checked the status of WLAN Auto-Config, and it was already showing as "present" or "active" (or at least it seemed that way). That is, it wasn't showing up as "disabled" in the list of services. And the setting was "Auto" (as opposed to the "Auto - delayed start" setting). So it would seem that Windows at least *thought* that the WLAN Auto-Config service was up/operational and set to the proper setting.

So not sure if that provides any "clue" to those reading this forum that understand this stuff better than I do.

And I strongly suspect that you're correct that if I did a full Windows Reset on the computer it would resolve the issue (like it did for you). But since it's not my computer, and I'm not sure how much stuff my neighbor has in the way of things that would need to get reinstalled, it's not really my call if I end up going that route. I'm still hoping that Microsoft will eventually discover that there's an underlying issue, fix it, and an upcoming Windows Update will restore proper functionality (eliminate the delay). Or, perhaps one of the contributors to this forum is aware of some way to do a "targeted reset" that just tries to "fix" the WLAN service, or the "network stack," or some other targeted fix, short of a full Windows Reset.

I appreciate all of the information you've provided!

Tom
You're welcome, of course. The information I provided comes through ChatGPT, since I'm no expert either. On the Wlan service, do you remember when you checked it if it was "running"? When I check mine now, it is running. If it wasn't running when you checked, then I understand that's a problem,

I'm going to hang around for awhile to see if any of the experts figures out what happened. It's really intriguing, though, to see that you experienced what appears to be exactly the same problem I had. I have to wonder how many others have and whether a "fix" will come to us at some point.
 

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Windows 11Processor Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-8565U CPU @ 1....Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 16.0 GB
OS
Windows 11
Computer type
Laptop
Manufacturer/Model
Dell
CPU
Processor Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-8565U CPU @ 1.80GHz, 199
Motherboard
BaseBoard Manufacturer Dell Inc. BaseBoard Product 08YRWT BaseBoard Version A00
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Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 16.0 GB
Rather, the problem really seems to be related to an underlying issue within *Windows* where the wifi adapter is not even getting *ENABLED* during that 4-minute delay.
OK, then you need to look for priority of Wi-Fi service. In my system, it's called WLAN AutoConfig in the list of services, or WlanSvc in Process Explorer. Its Startup type - Automatic, so it should start with high priority (highest are only the internal OS services like disk drive, USB etc). Check if your startup is Auto.

Maybe you have some other processes which start at the same time and consume too many resources. Also try to exclude as many startup processes as possible in Task Manager > Startup apps. Ideally, keep only SecurityHealthSystray.exe (Windows Security) and sound system like RtkAudUService64.exe on my laptop. Disable all others and check the startup time.
 

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Windows 11 Pro 25H2
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Manufacturer/Model
Lenovo Legion 5-15ARH05
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AMD Rysen 5 4600H
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32 GB (2 x 16 GB Samsung SO-DIMM DDR4-3200)
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GeForce GTX 1650 Ti, 4 GB GDDR6
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Ahhh...good point Jim Rockford. Now that you mention it, I can't remember if when I checked the status of the WLAN AutoConfig service during the 4-minute-delay period, whether the *status* was actually indicating "running" at that point. When I did that test/check, I was focused on confirming that it was truly recognizing that the "option" that was set was "Auto" (as opposed to the "Auto (delayed start)" setting). So I don't remember if I saw the status as "running" or something else at that point. I'll need to check that again next time I help my neighbor with her computer (something I'm supposed to do soon as I help her get several thousand pictures off her phone and iCloud and onto her computer). I'm guessing that I well might find that the service does *not* indicate "running" during that 4-minute delay. And then the question of course becomes *WHY* that service isn't getting kicked off immediately upon boot.

Thanks for your insights!

Tom
 

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Lenovo ThinkPad T16 Gen 3 Type 21MN-005QUS
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Intel Core Ultra 7 165U 1.7GHz
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???
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32GB
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HP Pavilion 25bw
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1920 x 1080
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SK Hynix HFS001TEJ9X162N 1TB
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Whatever came with the Lenovo laptop
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Dell wired keyboard
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HP wired mouse
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Variable (BrightSpeed 1GB fiber)
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Chrome
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AVAST Basic (free)
OK, then you need to look for priority of Wi-Fi service. In my system, it's called WLAN AutoConfig in the list of services, or WlanSvc in Process Explorer. Its Startup type - Automatic

Manual is default start type for that service.

 

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Windows 11 Pro
Hmmm...I've got another guess as to something that might be related to this phenomenon (just a guess).

I'm wondering if it has something to do with "Wi-Fi Direct Services Connection Manager Service," which I believe is related to using the "Wi-Fi Direct" function where you can print directly from a phone to your printer without going through your normal network. And this is something that I believe my neighbor *does* use/have enabled, whereas it is *not* something that I use/have enabled on my own computer (and I don't have the delay issue).

I'm wondering if there is some sort of conflict between the Wi-Fi Direct service and the WLAN AutoConfig service. Like perhaps the WLAN AutoConfig service is *waiting* to see what the Wi-Fi Direct service does/figures out, before activating.

Does that make any sense to anyone on this forum?

Tom
 

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Windows 11 Pro 25H2Intel Core Ultra 7 165U 1.7GHz32GBNone (motherboard graphics)
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Windows 11 Pro 25H2
Computer type
Laptop
Manufacturer/Model
Lenovo ThinkPad T16 Gen 3 Type 21MN-005QUS
CPU
Intel Core Ultra 7 165U 1.7GHz
Motherboard
???
Memory
32GB
Graphics Card(s)
None (motherboard graphics)
Sound Card
None (motherboard sound)
Monitor(s) Displays
HP Pavilion 25bw
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080
Hard Drives
SK Hynix HFS001TEJ9X162N 1TB
PSU
Whatever came with the Lenovo laptop
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Whatever came with the Lenovo laptop
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Whatever came with the Lenovo laptop
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Dell wired keyboard
Mouse
HP wired mouse
Internet Speed
Variable (BrightSpeed 1GB fiber)
Browser
Chrome
Antivirus
AVAST Basic (free)
To Slavic's most recent post (sorry, I overlooked that you had made that after Jim Rockford's last post), yes, my WLAN AutoConfig service is set to "Auto." And I've already disabled just about everything in the Startup settings, with no impact on start time nor elimination of the 4-minute delay.

Again, I think it is already firmly/convincingly established that the fundamental problem has to do with the WLAN AutoConfig service *NOT* starting until after a 4-minute delay, despite its setting being "Auto," and despite essentially nothing of substance being in the Startup app list.

Tom
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 11 Pro 25H2Intel Core Ultra 7 165U 1.7GHz32GBNone (motherboard graphics)
OS
Windows 11 Pro 25H2
Computer type
Laptop
Manufacturer/Model
Lenovo ThinkPad T16 Gen 3 Type 21MN-005QUS
CPU
Intel Core Ultra 7 165U 1.7GHz
Motherboard
???
Memory
32GB
Graphics Card(s)
None (motherboard graphics)
Sound Card
None (motherboard sound)
Monitor(s) Displays
HP Pavilion 25bw
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080
Hard Drives
SK Hynix HFS001TEJ9X162N 1TB
PSU
Whatever came with the Lenovo laptop
Case
Whatever came with the Lenovo laptop
Cooling
Whatever came with the Lenovo laptop
Keyboard
Dell wired keyboard
Mouse
HP wired mouse
Internet Speed
Variable (BrightSpeed 1GB fiber)
Browser
Chrome
Antivirus
AVAST Basic (free)
Manual is default start type for that service.
I am not sure that it is always right, especially if Wi-Fi is the only network adapter available. I would trust more Microsoft sources.
 

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Windows 11 Pro 25H2AMD Rysen 5 4600H32 GB (2 x 16 GB Samsung SO-DIMM DDR4-3200)GeForce GTX 1650 Ti, 4 GB GDDR6
OS
Windows 11 Pro 25H2
Computer type
Laptop
Manufacturer/Model
Lenovo Legion 5-15ARH05
CPU
AMD Rysen 5 4600H
Memory
32 GB (2 x 16 GB Samsung SO-DIMM DDR4-3200)
Graphics Card(s)
GeForce GTX 1650 Ti, 4 GB GDDR6
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
SSD M.2 512 GB SAMSUNG MZALQ512; SSD M.2 1 TB Seagate FireCuda 530
Mouse
Logitech M650L in Bluetooth mode
Again, I think it is already firmly/convincingly established that the fundamental problem has to do with the WLAN AutoConfig service *NOT* starting until after a 4-minute delay, despite its setting being "Auto," and despite essentially nothing of substance being in the Startup app list.
Just for the record -- I think I mentioned this awhile back -- I disabled absolutely EVERYTHING in the startup app list and all but the Microsoft services and there was absolutely NO IMPACT on the connection time.

Something is blocking the Wlan AutoConnect service, and when that service reaches a timeout, it restarts and connects immediately.

One thing ChatGPT had me try was to stop then start the service to see if it would connect right away. That didn't work because the service wasn't running so it couldn't be stopped (and restarted) until it actually ran (and connected).
 

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Windows 11Processor Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-8565U CPU @ 1....Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 16.0 GB
OS
Windows 11
Computer type
Laptop
Manufacturer/Model
Dell
CPU
Processor Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-8565U CPU @ 1.80GHz, 199
Motherboard
BaseBoard Manufacturer Dell Inc. BaseBoard Product 08YRWT BaseBoard Version A00
Memory
Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 16.0 GB
Something is blocking the Wlan AutoConnect service, and when that service reaches a timeout, it restarts and connects immediately.
Can the information in Event Viewer shed some light on what is going on during these 4 mins? Look at the last Critical, Error and Warning events.
 

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Windows 11 Pro 25H2AMD Rysen 5 4600H32 GB (2 x 16 GB Samsung SO-DIMM DDR4-3200)GeForce GTX 1650 Ti, 4 GB GDDR6
OS
Windows 11 Pro 25H2
Computer type
Laptop
Manufacturer/Model
Lenovo Legion 5-15ARH05
CPU
AMD Rysen 5 4600H
Memory
32 GB (2 x 16 GB Samsung SO-DIMM DDR4-3200)
Graphics Card(s)
GeForce GTX 1650 Ti, 4 GB GDDR6
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
SSD M.2 512 GB SAMSUNG MZALQ512; SSD M.2 1 TB Seagate FireCuda 530
Mouse
Logitech M650L in Bluetooth mode
Can the information in Event Viewer shed some light on what is going on during these 4 mins? Look at the last Critical, Error and Warning events.
That sounds like a good idea to me for someone who has the problem and the skills to navigate the Event Viewer. I have neither, but I'm anxious for someone to pick it up there and report back here.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 11Processor Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-8565U CPU @ 1....Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 16.0 GB
OS
Windows 11
Computer type
Laptop
Manufacturer/Model
Dell
CPU
Processor Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-8565U CPU @ 1.80GHz, 199
Motherboard
BaseBoard Manufacturer Dell Inc. BaseBoard Product 08YRWT BaseBoard Version A00
Memory
Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 16.0 GB
At this point, ChatGPT suggested running Windows Reset. That took over an hour to run and I'm just finishing up now re-installing my programs.

If the issue is resolved perhaps go back to the first post and on the right side mark it as solved.

Screenshot 2026-05-07 143409.webp
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 11 Pro
OS
Windows 11 Pro
If the issue is resolved perhaps go back to the first post and on the right side mark it as solved.

View attachment 170838
Since it's solved for me I marked it solved. But I suspect it might not be solved for everyone, especially since we don't know what caused the problem in the first place.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 11Processor Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-8565U CPU @ 1....Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 16.0 GB
OS
Windows 11
Computer type
Laptop
Manufacturer/Model
Dell
CPU
Processor Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-8565U CPU @ 1.80GHz, 199
Motherboard
BaseBoard Manufacturer Dell Inc. BaseBoard Product 08YRWT BaseBoard Version A00
Memory
Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 16.0 GB
I noticed a similar issue on our Dell XPS 8960 that started about a week ago, although the delay was about 2 minutes vs the previous 5 seconds or less. I did a search and found this thread, which is one of the most detailed and well written that I have seen in a long time.
I checked a few things and chose to uninstall the Intel driver update 24.40.0 that was released on 28 Apr, and reinstalled 24.30.1 via the Intel Driver & Support Assistant. Afterward, I shut the computer down for about 10 minutes, and when I restarted, the WiFi connected almost instantaneously again.
Thank you for the inspiration that grew from the thorough discussion, testing, and reporting.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 11 Pro 25H213th Gen Intel Core i7-13700 (2.1 to 5.1 GHz)32GB RAMNVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 Ti (8 GB), Intel UHD ...
OS
Windows 11 Pro 25H2
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Manufacturer/Model
Dell XPS 8960
CPU
13th Gen Intel Core i7-13700 (2.1 to 5.1 GHz)
Memory
32GB RAM
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 Ti (8 GB), Intel UHD Graphics 770 (2 GB)
Sound Card
NVIDIA High Definition Audio, Realtek Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell SE2722HX
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080
Hard Drives
512GB M.2 PCIe NVMe SSD + 2TB 7200RPM 3.5 SATA HDD

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