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#1
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Odd one this.
My Belkin F5D7630-4A Wireless Router/ADSL Modem has quite happily existed for three weeks in a solely wireless environment, with both my Win2K laptops happily connecting to it and providing lots of lovely wireless surfing. Yesterday, having rebuilt it after a HDD crash, I decided to let my WinXP Home desktop PC in on the action, not wirelessly - but by connecting a patch cable from it to the router. I made no configuration changes on the PC, and it happily worked straight off on the internet through this wired connection. But now I have a problem. The two wireless laptops can now only connect to the wireless network when the PC is switched on! If the PC is switched on, both it and the two wireless laptops will happily co-exist and be able to use the internet connection. If the PC is off, the two laptops can still see the wireless network, but cannot connect to it. How can this be?? Any clues please! David. David Wright |
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#2
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Have you checked your router interface/maybe reset MAC addresses.
Regards Bri@n "David Wright" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message news:(E-Mail Removed)... Odd one this. My Belkin F5D7630-4A Wireless Router/ADSL Modem has quite happily existed for three weeks in a solely wireless environment, with both my Win2K laptops happily connecting to it and providing lots of lovely wireless surfing. Yesterday, having rebuilt it after a HDD crash, I decided to let my WinXP Home desktop PC in on the action, not wirelessly - but by connecting a patch cable from it to the router. I made no configuration changes on the PC, and it happily worked straight off on the internet through this wired connection. But now I have a problem. The two wireless laptops can now only connect to the wireless network when the PC is switched on! If the PC is switched on, both it and the two wireless laptops will happily co-exist and be able to use the internet connection. If the PC is off, the two laptops can still see the wireless network, but cannot connect to it. How can this be?? Any clues please! David. |
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#3
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When all are connected, do a traceroute from one of the laptops and see
where it goes. I don't know what causes it but I have seen some bizarre behaviour like this before and it was completely independant of the router being used. Two wired pcs through a cable connection. Neither were running anything special but for some bizarre reason one of the PCs decided it was going to act as a DHCP server and router for the other PC. To muddle it even more, when that PC was off, the second PC would refuse to get a DHCP address from the real DHCP server. The solution? Well in the case above I gave the second PC static IP addressing. Try that and see what happens. -- Colin *Drop DEAD from the email address to reply* |
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#4
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> The solution?
Thank you for all the help, but it turns out to be completely unrelated to the PC - on the same day as this all packed up, I installed a wireless CCTV camera in the babies bedroom (£40 from Woolworths) - and some interference that must have caused! Have changed the wireless channel to something else, and suddenly all back on track again, and a crystal clear pic on the CCTV to boot. Amazing why I hadn't thought it could conflict - just goes to show how densely packed the spectrum is these days! The reason I assumed I could only get the wireless to work when the PC was on, comes from only sitting next to the PC and the router when trying the wireless out, obviously close enough to make the signal work and avoid the CCTV interference. How obscure, but how refreshing to have fixed it myself! D. |
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| belkin, capability, f4a, losing, wireless |
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