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Wireless puzzler...NIC will send, *not* receive

 
 
intrepid_dw@hotmail.com
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      06-12-2006, 06:49 PM
I have a homebrew PC with a DLink DWL-G510 wireless NIC. This PC
suffered from an OS corruption problem earlier this week, and I'm in
the final stages of getting it back on it's feet - a WinXP Pro box
w/SP2.

With the OS now back on its feet and happy, I'm down to the last step -
getting this blasted NIC working.

The problem is that with a good signal and an apparent connection
message from the card's management utility, it will not receive
*anything* from the network. I have used the manufacturer's
configuration utility AND MS WZC to configure the WEP encryption key
multiple times to no avail (and this key works properly for the other
wireless clients using this network). The network shows up in the card
utility's site survey app on the proper channel with encryption turned
on, but so far it will send, but still not receive.

I've verified that the Windows Firewall is turned off; the machine has
no antivirus or other programs (it's used primarily as a DVR), it can
ping itself, and the routing table is correct (proper outbound routes,
etc). But nothing ever comes back; pings time out (names are never
resolved and hard IP addy's just time out), tracerts never make it to
the gateway, names never get resolved by my DNS server, so something is
obviously still wrong.

I've uninstalled and reinstalled the card drivers, verified that my
external firewall isn't (via some sort of weird misconfiguration)
seeing and dumping packets from this box, and verified that it is
getting the proper IP address -- and all is as it should be.

I'm beginning to wonder if the antenna itself is physically broken; but
it would seem that idea is less likely given that it tells me it has
established a connection. Given that all other wireless clients in this
network are functioning perfectly, and I've checked what I know to
check several times, I'm afraid I'm at the head-scratching point. I'd
love to find out it was something stupid I've just overlooked.

If anyone has any suggestions, I'd be most appreciative.

Thanks
intrepid

 
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Quaoar
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      06-12-2006, 11:56 PM
(E-Mail Removed) wrote:
> I have a homebrew PC with a DLink DWL-G510 wireless NIC. This PC
> suffered from an OS corruption problem earlier this week, and I'm in
> the final stages of getting it back on it's feet - a WinXP Pro box
> w/SP2.
>
> With the OS now back on its feet and happy, I'm down to the last step -
> getting this blasted NIC working.
>
> The problem is that with a good signal and an apparent connection
> message from the card's management utility, it will not receive
> *anything* from the network. I have used the manufacturer's
> configuration utility AND MS WZC to configure the WEP encryption key
> multiple times to no avail (and this key works properly for the other
> wireless clients using this network). The network shows up in the card
> utility's site survey app on the proper channel with encryption turned
> on, but so far it will send, but still not receive.
>
> I've verified that the Windows Firewall is turned off; the machine has
> no antivirus or other programs (it's used primarily as a DVR), it can
> ping itself, and the routing table is correct (proper outbound routes,
> etc). But nothing ever comes back; pings time out (names are never
> resolved and hard IP addy's just time out), tracerts never make it to
> the gateway, names never get resolved by my DNS server, so something is
> obviously still wrong.
>
> I've uninstalled and reinstalled the card drivers, verified that my
> external firewall isn't (via some sort of weird misconfiguration)
> seeing and dumping packets from this box, and verified that it is
> getting the proper IP address -- and all is as it should be.
>
> I'm beginning to wonder if the antenna itself is physically broken; but
> it would seem that idea is less likely given that it tells me it has
> established a connection. Given that all other wireless clients in this
> network are functioning perfectly, and I've checked what I know to
> check several times, I'm afraid I'm at the head-scratching point. I'd
> love to find out it was something stupid I've just overlooked.
>
> If anyone has any suggestions, I'd be most appreciative.
>
> Thanks
> intrepid
>


Try this: open TCP/IP properties of the wireless connection, Advanced
button, Options tab, TCP/IP Filtering properties. Verify that Filtering
is not enabled, and if enabled, set all ports/protocols to Permit All
and not Permit None.

Q
 
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John Navas
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      06-13-2006, 02:31 AM
On 12 Jun 2006 11:49:57 -0700, (E-Mail Removed) wrote in
<(E-Mail Removed) .com>:

>I have a homebrew PC with a DLink DWL-G510 wireless NIC. This PC
>suffered from an OS corruption problem earlier this week, and I'm in
>the final stages of getting it back on it's feet - a WinXP Pro box
>w/SP2.
>
>With the OS now back on its feet and happy, I'm down to the last step -
>getting this blasted NIC working.
>
>The problem is that with a good signal and an apparent connection
>message from the card's management utility, it will not receive
>*anything* from the network. I have used the manufacturer's
>configuration utility AND MS WZC to configure the WEP encryption key
>multiple times to no avail (and this key works properly for the other
>wireless clients using this network). The network shows up in the card
>utility's site survey app on the proper channel with encryption turned
>on, but so far it will send, but still not receive.


It *tries* to send, like talking out loud when you're alone.

>If anyone has any suggestions, I'd be most appreciative.


Try it with encryption turned off temporarily.

p.s. Strongly advise using WPA instead of WEP, which is easily cracked.

--
Best regards, FAQ for Wireless Internet: <http://Wireless.wikia.com>
John Navas FAQ for Wi-Fi: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi>
Wi-Fi How To: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi_How_To>
Fixes to Wi-Fi Problems: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi_Fixes>
 
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intrepid_dw@hotmail.com
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      06-13-2006, 12:31 PM
John,

Thanks for the tip.

I originally tried to configure all my wireless clients to use WPA, but
the version of the firmware for my router that supported WPA is buggy
and never worked correctly. I was more or less forced back to WEP. I
certainly appreciate the relative "hackability" of it, but given that
there are a minimum of five other wide-open networks in the area that
show up on my laptop's site-survey, I suspect those provide an open
door where mine at least has a chain-lock...

Thanks again,

-Intrepid

John Navas wrote:
> On 12 Jun 2006 11:49:57 -0700, (E-Mail Removed) wrote in
> <(E-Mail Removed) .com>:
>
> >I have a homebrew PC with a DLink DWL-G510 wireless NIC. This PC
> >suffered from an OS corruption problem earlier this week, and I'm in
> >the final stages of getting it back on it's feet - a WinXP Pro box
> >w/SP2.
> >
> >With the OS now back on its feet and happy, I'm down to the last step -
> >getting this blasted NIC working.
> >
> >The problem is that with a good signal and an apparent connection
> >message from the card's management utility, it will not receive
> >*anything* from the network. I have used the manufacturer's
> >configuration utility AND MS WZC to configure the WEP encryption key
> >multiple times to no avail (and this key works properly for the other
> >wireless clients using this network). The network shows up in the card
> >utility's site survey app on the proper channel with encryption turned
> >on, but so far it will send, but still not receive.

>
> It *tries* to send, like talking out loud when you're alone.
>
> >If anyone has any suggestions, I'd be most appreciative.

>
> Try it with encryption turned off temporarily.
>
> p.s. Strongly advise using WPA instead of WEP, which is easily cracked.
>
> --
> Best regards, FAQ for Wireless Internet: <http://Wireless.wikia.com>
> John Navas FAQ for Wi-Fi: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi>
> Wi-Fi How To: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi_How_To>
> Fixes to Wi-Fi Problems: <http://wireless.wikia.com/wiki/Wi-Fi_Fixes>


 
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Diamontina Cocktail
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      06-13-2006, 01:18 PM

<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed) oups.com...
> John,
>
> Thanks for the tip.
>
> I originally tried to configure all my wireless clients to use WPA, but
> the version of the firmware for my router that supported WPA is buggy
> and never worked correctly. I was more or less forced back to WEP. I
> certainly appreciate the relative "hackability" of it, but given that
> there are a minimum of five other wide-open networks in the area that
> show up on my laptop's site-survey, I suspect those provide an open
> door where mine at least has a chain-lock...
>


WEP has been demonstrated to be able to be cracked, at 64 bit, within 3
minutes by a US Govt agency not all that many years ago.


 
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