Ian Finlayson wrote:
>
> "(E-Mail Removed)" wrote:
>
>
>>On 2-Sep-2006, =?Utf-8?B?SWFuIEZpbmxheXNvbg==?=
>><(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>I've recently built a new machine which includes a Linksys WMP54G. For about
>>>two weeks it was fine but today it's been getting disconnected from my
>>>wireless network and having to reconnect.
>>
>>Some source of interference?
>>
>>Try static addresses, DHCP seems to be a one attempt system, it
>>it fails it waits, and waits, until you do a repair or reboot.
>>I'm using a wireless USB adapter and USB switch to cover
>>two machines, with static addresses it switches between the two
>>with no problems. It doesn't work with Zero Config, just hangs.
>>
>
>
> I can't see what would be causing the interference, the new machine is in
> the same place as the old one was and that was problem free. The only thing I
> can see as changing is there's now two machines, both using wireless, next to
> each other but I've tried manually disconnecting one from the network and the
> problem still remains.
>
> As for the DHCP I'll give it a try but it doesn't seem likely. I can obtain
> an IP with every machine on the network and when the connection does go down
> it always manages to reconnect and obtain the same IP.
Disconnects several times a minute is too often to be something simple
like a power-save mode kicking in, and there are supposed to be
mechanisms in the 802.11 protocol to prevent mutual interference from
"two [802.11g units] next to each other." Just in case, you might try
turning off the old one and see if the new one still drops frequently.
On the other hand, there are a lot of other sources of interference in
the 2.4GHz band: microwave ovens, cordless phones, and Bluetooth
devices, to name a few. You don't happen to have one of the "pre-N"
wireless devices do you? Or maybe there's one nearby. Those are known to
cause problems.
Try moving the new computer a little bit. Unless it's in exactly the
same location and orientation as the old one, you can't draw any
conclusions about interference or lack thereof. The wavelength of
2.4GHz (used for 802.11G) is less than 5 inches -- it doesn't take much
of a move to change what the antenna sees. And even if you exactly
duplicated the location and orientation, the new card undoubtedly has
different antenna characteristics and different sensitivity to
intereference.
You can try looking in EventViewer (Start > Run > eventvwr) and see if
there's anything going on. Otherwise, I'm not sure what to tell you,
other than you may have a flakey card.
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