I’ll just mention my 2 cents since I searched long and hard for a similar problem. The connectors on the card are MHF-4. If you search exactly “MHF-4” you should find a small selection of internal antennas and threaded antenna connectors. Personally I’m going to find or drill a pair of holes in my case for a pair of threaded MHF-4 connectors to mount a pair of SMA antennas to the rear of my case.
Yes, you need an additional antenna for the module, as the module itself does not contain any antennas. The Intel Wi-Fi 6 AX200 module is usually connected to external antennas to establish the wireless connection. Antennas and cables are often included in desktop kits, but you have to purchase them separately for pure modules.
B365M Pro4 have a M.2 socket key E supports type 2230 Wi-Fi/BT module.
AC9560/AX200X is CNVi type and cannot support at B365 chipset.
https://ark.intel.com/content...
For your reference, we tested Intel 3168, 8265, 9260 at our lab and all worked fine.
Hello, is the question serious? You don't have a socket for this module on your board.
If you want to set up a WLAN, you have to buy a plug-in card for the PCI slot.
Yes, it works. This has already been answered in the questions, including information on the required antenna cables.
As far as I know, there are only restrictions with notebooks because the manufacturers maintain a blacklist in the BIOS.
Yes. You have to download the software before changing, it's possible that Windows doesn't detect it. Don't make a mistake with the antenna cable design.
@Ernie01208 - I installed the card in my HP ENVY 360 13" AMD laptop - and used the existing antennas. This worked without any problems and the data rate is slightly higher despite the same router. Hope this helps you.