5 minutes
At first glance, it looks promising: 2.4/5 GHz support, decent Linux compatibility on paper, and a cheap price tag. But getting this specific chipset (BCM4313) to play nicely—especially outside of a pure Linux environment—can be surprisingly painful.
# Check your device ID lspci -nn | grep Broadcom Manually fetch the firmware (Debian/Ubuntu example) sudo apt install firmware-b43-installer Or copy the blob from a Windows driver extraction sudo cp brcmfmac4313-pcie.bin /lib/firmware/brcm/ broadcom bcm94313hmg2l driver
April 18, 2026
You’ll likely hit the infamous “Direct firmware load for brcm/brcmfmac4313-sdio.bin failed” error. 5 minutes At first glance, it looks promising: 2
Taming the Broadcom BCM94313HMG2L: A Driver Deep Dive
Have you managed to get the BCM94313HMG2L working under a recent BSD or with OpenWrt? Let me know in the comments. #Broadcom #LinuxDrivers #Hackintosh #WiFi #HardwareDebug Taming the Broadcom BCM94313HMG2L: A Driver Deep Dive
Broadcom uses different firmware blobs for the 4313 depending on whether the card is connected via SDIO or PCIe. For this card (PCIe variant), you actually need brcmfmac4313-pcie.bin .
The kernel recognizes the PCIe device and loads brcmfmac .
Only if you get it for free or under $5. For the same Mini PCIe slot, a Realtek RTL8821AE or an Intel 7260HMW offers dual-band 802.11ac and far better driver sanity.