Problems... very frustrated!
#1
Posted 23 May 2002 - 05:59 AM
I have the DSL modem connected to the Router while having an ethernet cable connect to my ethernet port on my computer. For some reason, the data recieved from the internet comes directly from the modem, instead of goin' to the router and then to my ethernet adapter. I would hook up my laptop to the router and the connections are fine with the LED's but I can't get a connection with the laptop. Any suggestions? Using XP.
#2
Posted 23 May 2002 - 09:46 AM
the data recieved from the internet comes directly from the modem, instead of goin' to the router and then to my ethernet adapter. I
What do you mean? You have a cable from the modem to the router and another cable from the router to the PC? How can the router be bypassed then ?
H.
#3
Posted 23 May 2002 - 06:15 PM
But I still don't get a internet connection through my laptop. When I surf the web, my modem's WAN ACT light blinks crazy saying that it's recieving and transmitting data, but my WAN ACT light on my router SHOULD DO THE SAME, but it doesn't. Any suggestions?
#4
Posted 23 May 2002 - 06:52 PM
Is your router configured correctly? Are your TCP/IP settings correct?
If you remove the router from the setup, does the laptop work with the modem plugged directly into it?
#5
Posted 23 May 2002 - 08:36 PM
1) does the setup work with the other computer or is it only the laptop that has a problem?
2) have you followed the setup instructions in the manual exactly? Go over it again. Checkout Linksys site for Q & A 's
3) have you changed any settings in the routers setup screen ?
4) is the LAN on DHCP or are you using fixed IP's? Is the DHCP service running on the laptop ?
5) What happens if you connect your modem directly to the Laptop? Are you connecting your laptop to other LAN's also (work, college etc)?
I have the same Linksys (BEFSR41), marvelous piece of hardware !
H.
#6
Posted 24 May 2002 - 04:23 AM
Perhaps you can walk me through the exact same steps you used to hook your computer up with the same router as mine including IP addresses and DHCP. When I used the NETGEAR one, I didn't have to do any type of setup.. like I said.. just plug everything in and it worked. With this LinkSys, it's all confusing. =(
Hykster
#7
Posted 24 May 2002 - 07:15 AM
#8
Posted 24 May 2002 - 08:42 AM
#9
Posted 24 May 2002 - 09:01 AM
so what's going on here? USB? I'm confused.
The DSL modem should only be plugged into the router's WAN port, and nothing else.
Then each computer gets it's NIC connected to its own port on the router, with DHCP enabled on each computer.
#10
Posted 24 May 2002 - 09:21 AM
#11
Posted 24 May 2002 - 10:09 AM
#12
Posted 24 May 2002 - 10:13 AM
I can't access the LinkSys router info because the 192.168.1.1 is the DSL modem's stats and not the router.
If they are connected Modem->Linksys->Computer and you type in 192.168.1.1 in your browser the signal cannot go to the modem without passning the router, and should open the Linksys settings page. Now, if you have some USB connection bypassing the whole thing this could of course happen, but as our resident LAN guru Clutch already said: unplug the USB (for good). What happens then, and what happens if you do this without the modem plugged in?
Two easy checks if you still have trouble after unplugguing the USB:
Did you buy the Linksys new (i.e are you sure the settings are at factory default)?
Are you sure the two involved cables are standard Ethernet cables (as opposed to crossover cables) ?
H.
#13
Posted 24 May 2002 - 10:16 AM
DSL Modem into phone line, ethernet port from modem connected to WAN port on Router. Port 4 ethernet cable from router goin' to my desktop computer ethernet card... port 3 ethernet cable from router goin' to my laptop ethernet connection. Router says that it recognizes both port 3 and 4 and they are functioning correctly with the LED's on router. Click on Internet Explorer... "Cannot find page requested" error.
#14
Posted 24 May 2002 - 10:24 AM
If they are connected Modem->Linksys->Computer and you type in 192.168.1.1 in your browser the signal cannot go to the modem without passning the router, and should open the Linksys settings page. Now, if you have some USB connection bypassing the whole thing this could of course happen, but as our resident LAN guru Clutch already said: unplug the USB (for good). What happens then, and what happens if you do this without the modem plugged in?
Two easy checks if you still have trouble after unplugguing the USB:
Did you buy the Linksys new (i.e are you sure the settings are at factory default)?
Are you sure the two involved cables are standard Ethernet cables (as opposed to crossover cables) ?
H.
I bought the LinkSys new and everything was in the box. My cables are the standard RJ-45 Ethernet cables.
#15
Posted 24 May 2002 - 10:28 AM
#16
Posted 24 May 2002 - 12:11 PM
Try with both computers but not at the same time.
What happens when you type http://192.168.1.1 in IE and hit enter?
What happens if you open a DOS box and do ping 192.168.1.1 ?
First thing here is to get to the Linksys setup screen - have you ever been there ?
H.
H.
#17
Posted 24 May 2002 - 03:58 PM
#18
Posted 24 May 2002 - 05:02 PM
Okay, I can access the router setup broswer page, but I am unable to access the internet connection with both computers. Both of them won't work now. Here's my current setup:
DSL Modem into phone line, ethernet port from modem connected to WAN port on Router. Port 4 ethernet cable from router goin' to my desktop computer ethernet card... port 3 ethernet cable from router goin' to my laptop ethernet connection. Router says that it recognizes both port 3 and 4 and they are functioning correctly with the LED's on router. Click on Internet Explorer... "Cannot find page requested" error.
Spiffy, you're moving forward. Now, can you ping from one system to the other? Have you tried that? Also, can you ping by NetBIOS name from one to the other? Are the clients getting all relevant DHCP info from the router (like gateway and DNS servers)? One more thing, when the router gets the info it needs from the DSL modem, it has to pass on some info to the clients, so what you might want to do is the following to ditch any old information still cached on the clients. From the command line, use:
ipconfig /release (to release DHCP information from the NIC)
ipconfig /renew (for a new subscription)
ipconfig /flushdns (to get rid of old DNS name resolutions that might be giving you errors).
#19
Posted 24 May 2002 - 09:17 PM
#20
Posted 25 May 2002 - 04:07 AM
Hykster

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