Thanks CJT - in line
CJT wrote:
> Simon Woods wrote:
>
>> Hi
>>
>> I've been having problems getting an XP/win98 dual boot machine
>> joining my network wirelessly.
>>
>> See "Wireless connected - can't ping" on ms.public.win98.networking
>>
>> I've thought it was perhaps a problem with IRQ conflict so I've
>> removed all expansion cards including the Wireless network card and
>> now decided to try and configure the onboard lan. I've a spare router
>> which I'm now plugging in directly to the lan connection of the machine.
>>
>> The router is acting as DHCP server.
>>
>> I'm finding now that the router is assigning an IP address to my machine
>
>
> so obviously those two are talking (which means the rudiments of
> networking are installed and functional)
>
> of course, if all that's connected to the wired router is this one
> machine, you're not going to pass much data through it <g>
>
>> but my machine can't ping the DHCP server.
>
>
> some routers (optionally) won't respond to pings for security reasons,
> so that in itself isn't necessarily a problem -- if you're getting an
> address from it, you must have a connection
>
> but many routers have setup screens accessible via a browser; you might
> explore those
I've tried the admin screen from IE but it can't find it - which seems
to suggest one-way traffic --- dhcp-server => PC.
>
> It can ping itself both by
>
>> "ping localhost" and "ping DHCP-assigned address"
>>
> no problem there
>
>> There's nothing in the arp table (... don't know what that tells me,
>> but I seem to think that when it has been working, there has been an
>> entry)
>>
>
> it sounds like your wireless connection isn't being established
>
> but you probably knew that
>
> have you installed the drivers for the wireless card, etc.?
>
> are you sure the wireless stuff works?
>
> when you go into My Computer -> Control Panel -> Network, is your
> wireless card there, and bound to TCP/IP?
>
> are there any status lights on the wireless equipment, and what do
> they tell you?
Yes ... yes ... yes ... default gateway set DNS stuff set ... shimmering
lights green on both the router and NIC when booting up then solid green.
This used to work. I've had it working both with Win98 and WinXP
wirelessly previously on this same machine --- but now it just 'won't take'!
>> I've tried re-installing tcp/ip. (I've actually re-installed Win98
>> about 8 times so far!!)
>
>
> then it's time to try something different
>
> I don't think the problem is with basic TCP/IP and Win98 networking --
> that the machine will talk to the router demonstrates those are working
I was concerned because of multiple devices sharing the same IRQ, so
I've pulled things back to a bare minimum ... taken out all expansion
cards, disabled in BIOS all devices which are sharing the IRQ which the
card will use --- so I've got a pretty basic setup. I've tried disabling
IRQ steering but no good
I've also tried wireless and wired connections. The wired connection
gives a DHCP-originated ip address which I don't get wirelessly, but
still can't ping the router nor open it's admin screen.
I'm beginning to think it must be a hardware problem, but the thing is
that I've used the on-board lan connection for wired and an expansion
card for wireless onto 2 different routers and the results are the same
.... it don't work (other than for wired I get a DHCP-originated ip
address!) which makes me think it's something basic I'm missing.
I've other win98 machines on my wireless network and they work fine!
.... and it used to work !!
Thanks again for your help
Simon
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