Fixer wrote:
> Then if you've tried all these as a final test you could try hard connecting
> the dell laptop rather than wirelessly, if thats fine then contact Dell
> under warranty explain all the tersts you have done and they should swap out
> the systemboard and or the wireless card
> "Scott Smith" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
> news:v30Ad.35545$(E-Mail Removed)...
>
>>I've been going crazy trying to figure this one out.
>>
>>I have a Netgear WGR614 Cable/DSL Wireless Router 54 Mbps/2.4 GHz that I
>>bought in early 2004. At the time, I only had 802.11b cards in our
>>laptops, and everything worked fine.
>>
>>Recently I added a Netgear 802.11g PC wireless card to my wife's new Dell
>>PC. From time to time, she would tell me "the Internet's been off all
>>day". When I looked, every other machine could connect except for hers.
>>Looking at her PC, the card is getting a strong signal, but no
>>communication is taking place.
>>
>>I thought the problem might be related to the Windows XP SP2 upgrade that
>>I'd performed recently, but I've looked through the knowledge base
>>articles, and none of the reported problems seem to apply to me.
>>
>>Recently I added a Netgear 802.11g PCMCIA card to my wife's laptop. Now we
>>have two 'G' wireless devices in the house, and sure enough, she's getting
>>the same behavior with her laptop now.
>>
>>When a communication problem occurs:
>>
>>- The router seems to be operating fine (all wired and 802.11b wireless
>>clients are fine).
>>- One 802.11g client will typically be fine while the other can't
>>communicate
>>- The affected 802.11g client shows excellent signal strength, but "little
>>or no connectivity". Web requests, ping, DHCP (through release and renew)
>>all time out.
>>- Trying to "repair" the connection on the affected client generally
>>doesn't work (DHCP time out)
>>- Powering down the router and powering it back up doesn't seem to do
>>anything
>>- Unplugging every other wireless device in the house (cordless phone)
>>doesn't seem to make any difference
>>- The problem occurs intermittently. Things can work for days on end, then
>>one system will refuse to communicate. Once affected, the system doesn't
>>seem to recover by itself.
>>
>>Here are some additional details:
>>
>>- I was using 128-bit WEP. I've tried dropping to 64-bit WEP with no
>>apparent difference in behavior.
>>- I have an access list set up by Mac address.
>>- I updated the firmware in the wireless router to the latest version - no
>>difference.
>>- There appear to be many versions of this router (WGR614, WGR614v2 -
>>WGR614v5). I have the original version with the "v#" suffix.
>>
>>Does anyone have experience with the WGR614, or just have some suggestions
>>as to how I can troubleshoot this?
>>
>>Thanks very much in advance.
>>
>>-Scott
>>
>
>
>
By any chance are you using Zone Alarm? If so, make sure it recognizes
new networks when the computer boots up. I may be looking for the name
you hve entered, and the computer is loging into "new network".
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