On Thu, 8 Nov 2007 23:55:50 -0500, Trilitech
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>I have a Linksys wireless-n usb adapter connecting to a Linksys
>wireless-n router on a computer running Vista. It connects just fine,
>but periodically the connection will drop.
>
>As far as windows is concerned the adapter is working perfectly, but
>the router went away. That isn't the case of course and other devices
>connected to that router continue to work fine. Unplugging and
>replugging in the usb adapter corrects the problem, but it's very
>annoying.
>
>Not sure what the exact pattern is to getting it to mess up, but it
>seems to be when transferring a lot of data. Downloading a large file
>will usually do the trick. Trying to load a network game like Warcraft
>will kill it instantly 100% of the time.
>
>I've tried tweaking every router/adapter setting I can think of, but no
>luck. Any suggestions?
Model numbers on your wireless router and USB adapter would be nice.
Have you checked if both are running the latest firmware and driver
versions? Have you installed all the Vista updates including the
optional stuff?
Despite what I think of Vista, it does add some nifty diagnostics that
XP lacks. In this case, you'll want to look at the Wireless trace
logs:
<http://technet2.microsoft.com/WindowsVista/en/library/3ed3d027-5ae8-4cb0-ade5-0a7c446cd4f71033.mspx?mfr=true>
It's a complex ugly mess, but you should be able to find the reason
for the disconnects, who is initiating the disconnect, and possibly
why. It could be 802.1x authentication failure, WPA key exchange
failure, interference from another system, microwave ovens, or
something similar. Search for the buzzword "disconnect" in the logs.
To enable tracing, run:
Start -> run -> cmd <enter>
netsh wlan set tracing
To disable tracing, run:
netsh wlan set tracing no
The logs end up in:
C:\Windows\tracing\wireless\
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