fbpx

TP-Link Nano USB Bluetooth 4.0 Adapter for PC Laptop Desktop Computer, Long Range Bluetooth Dongle/Receiver for Windows 10/8.1/8/7/XP, Plug and…

Add to wishlistAdded to wishlistRemoved from wishlist 0
Add to compare
- 40%

Original price was: £9.99.Current price is: £5.99.

Last updated on February 22, 2025 9:36 am Details
TP-Link Nano USB Bluetooth 4.0 Adapter for PC Laptop Desktop Computer, Long Range Bluetooth Dongle/Receiver for Windows 10/8.1/8/7/XP, Plug and…
TP-Link Nano USB Bluetooth 4.0 Adapter for PC Laptop Desktop Computer, Long Range Bluetooth Dongle/Receiver for Windows 10/8.1/8/7/XP, Plug and…

Original price was: £9.99.Current price is: £5.99.

Description

  • Bluetooth 4.0ย โ€“ applies the latest Bluetooth 4.0 with low energy (BLE) technology
  • Driver freeย โ€“ plug and play for Win 8, Win 8.1, and win 10
  • Nano-sizedย โ€“ ultra-small for convenient portability with reliable high Performance
  • Supported Operating Systemย โ€“ supports Windows 10/8.1/8/7/XP
  • Backward compatibility โ€“ fullย support for Bluetooth V3.0/2.1/2.0/1.1

Additional information

Specification: TP-Link Nano USB Bluetooth 4.0 Adapter for PC Laptop Desktop Computer, Long Range Bluetooth Dongle/Receiver for Windows 10/8.1/8/7/XP, Plug and…

Platform
Operating System

General
Brand

โ€ŽTP-Link

Specification
Product Dimensions

โ€Ž1.5 x 0.7 x 1.9 cm, 30 Grams

Item model number

โ€ŽUB4A

Manufacturer

Are Batteries Included

โ€ŽNo

Item Weight

โ€Ž30 g

Reviews (4)

4 reviews for TP-Link Nano USB Bluetooth 4.0 Adapter for PC Laptop Desktop Computer, Long Range Bluetooth Dongle/Receiver for Windows 10/8.1/8/7/XP, Plug and…

3.5 out of 5
1
2
0
0
1
Write a review
Show all Most Helpful Highest Rating Lowest Rating
  1. interlocked

    Bought this to compare against a Asus USB-BT400 that was giving me some gip. Specifically, it seemed to have spotty reception when I was sat on the sofa about 2m away, no obstructions.
    This has no such problems, and works on Ubuntu, Fedora, etc. without having to do fiddly things with Windows drivers to get it to work.
    It does seem to lose connection when the computer hasn’t been used for a few minutes, which I think is something to do with a bug in the Bluetooth software on Linux. Hopefully that will be fixed soon!

    Helpful(0) Unhelpful(0)You have already voted this
  2. Ian13

    This little thing works… eventually!
    Windows 10 didn’t manage to “Plug n Play” this so there was a bit of messing around to get it to work. This seems to be a common issue so I’ll run through what to do to resolve it, since once you get this up and running it’s pretty darned good!
    Firstly, if yours plugs and plays then woohoo! You’re away. DO NOT install the driver as directed by the “Quick Start Guide” unless you are running Windows 7 or earlier. Installing the driver on Windows 8 or later will just screw things up and result in strange behaviour.
    If you don’t get it working straight from the box then type “Device Manager” in the search bar and have a look for a Bluetooth symbol. If not, look in “Universal Serial Bus controllers”, click the little arrow to expand the list in either case and look for “CSR”.
    Right click and select Update Driver.
    Next choose “Browse my computer for driver update”
    Take the lower option “Let me pick from a list of available drivers on my Computer”
    Select…

    Helpful(0) Unhelpful(0)You have already voted this
  3. Robert White

    There is nothing wrong with the product itself, and it ought to work well in plug and play with native drivers IF windows 10 Bluetooth support didn’t let it down. That’s apparently no fault of this product, though, so I haven’t marked it down, and there is a workaround.

    1) WHAT HAPPENED TO ME USING WIN10 PLUG AND PLAY: Product installs immediately. All drivers present and correct. Paired an audio speaker successfully. But wouldn’t play, and in sound control panel it persistently said the device was ‘disconnected’. The internet is absolutely full of people reporting exactly the same problem, and loads of suggested “solutions” that simply don’t work – I tried most if not all of them! After further research – likely cause is that it seems until Win 8 Microsoft left it to hardware device suppliers to provide their own Bluetooth stack software, but from 8 onward Microsoft implemented a plug and play driver solution within windows itself. But this is inadequate/incomplete in some respects…

    Helpful(0) Unhelpful(0)You have already voted this
  4. R. Burman

    After installing the USB dongle I went to the TP-Link website and downloaded their own OFFICIAL drivers for this device. I had a lot of trouble and Outlook 365 kept crashing because of the ‘CSR’ addin. Luckily, I had noticed that the hardware seems to be made by a company called Cambridge Silicon Radio, a company which no longer exists. I fought it out with the drivers and tried to use Driver Booster to get a later version of the drivers but with no luck. The drivers that come from the TP-Link website were created in 2012!! Office 365 didn’t even exist then, nor did Windows 10. No wonder the drivers are a bag of rubbish. The company no longer exists that made the hardware so there won’t be any new drivers. Unless you are running an old PC with Windows 7 or 8, do NOT buy this device. I will be sending mine back immediately.

    Helpful(0) Unhelpful(0)You have already voted this

    Add a review

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

     - 
    French
     - 
    fr
    German
     - 
    de
    Italian
     - 
    it
    Spanish
     - 
    es
    English
     - 
    en
    PlazaCompare
    Logo
    Compare items
    • Total (0)
    Compare
    0
    Shopping cart