I have never heard of a consumer desktop computer that needs a special power plug due to the power it draws.
Power sockets and plugs are designed so you cannot plug a device into a socket that requires more power than the socket can handle.
So if it fits in the socket and it trips out the circuit, you either have the circuit overloaded with other devices, or there's something wrong with the device you are plugging into the circuit.
As for the other issue, some more information would be required to troubleshoot it.
It will automatically detect your service tag and display all up to date drivers that apply to your R11.
I have an R10, so I cannot see the drivers for the R11, but I am sure Bluetooth drivers are listed there.
Installing those might fix your problem. There's also 2 options of Bluetooth connectivity when you order the R11: either Dell Bluetooth or Killer Bluetooth. You would have to download the corresponding drivers.
Bios updates I would only perform using the manual downloaded files, not the auto update feature. As always, be careful with bios updates and perform them at your own risk. I do not think you need a bios update to fix your Bluetooth issue, just a driver update/reinstall.
Hi There i have just experience the same problem and now have thankfully solved it after a lot of time going through every possible scenario. how i got it back was to up date the BIOS even though it had the latest version already in my R11 hope this helps.
Vanadiel
6 Professor
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7.1K Posts
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February 20th, 2021 13:00
I have never heard of a consumer desktop computer that needs a special power plug due to the power it draws.
Power sockets and plugs are designed so you cannot plug a device into a socket that requires more power than the socket can handle.
So if it fits in the socket and it trips out the circuit, you either have the circuit overloaded with other devices, or there's something wrong with the device you are plugging into the circuit.
As for the other issue, some more information would be required to troubleshoot it.
For R11 drivers, you can always download the latest drivers directly from https://www.dell.com/support/home/en-ca/product-support/product/alienware-aurora-r11-desktop/drivers
It will automatically detect your service tag and display all up to date drivers that apply to your R11.
I have an R10, so I cannot see the drivers for the R11, but I am sure Bluetooth drivers are listed there.
Installing those might fix your problem. There's also 2 options of Bluetooth connectivity when you order the R11: either Dell Bluetooth or Killer Bluetooth. You would have to download the corresponding drivers.
Bios updates I would only perform using the manual downloaded files, not the auto update feature. As always, be careful with bios updates and perform them at your own risk. I do not think you need a bios update to fix your Bluetooth issue, just a driver update/reinstall.
Annoyed R11 Owner
1 Rookie
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40 Posts
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February 20th, 2021 17:00
this is the most annoying worded reply ever i want a numbered list step by step
Vanadiel
6 Professor
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7.1K Posts
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February 20th, 2021 17:00
1. Go to https://www.dell.com/support/home/en-ca/product-support/product/alienware-aurora-r11-desktop/drivers
2. Let it detect your service tag, if it does not do this automatically already.
3. Download latest listed version of Bluetooth drivers.
4. Install those drives.
5. Reboot and pair your Bluetooth devices.
R11 owner
1 Message
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October 4th, 2021 01:00
Hi There i have just experience the same problem and now have thankfully solved it after a lot of time going through every possible scenario. how i got it back was to up date the BIOS even though it had the latest version already in my R11 hope this helps.