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Dysfunctional Home Network, Wireless occasionally stops working
Gene7887
post Aug 17 2008, 09:57 AM
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OS: Windows XP SP3, Mac OS X 10.4 "Tiger"



Hi there, I was hoping someone could help me with a problem that's been plaguing my house for the past few months. We have a considerable amount of wired and wireless devices all accessing the same router, and it seems that a few times a week that the wireless connection dies and the router needs to be restarted for the problem to be alleviated. The stats:

ISP: Verizon FiOS
Router: Actiontec MI424WR (came with FiOS install)
Wired devices (3): 1 Dell Dimension 4600C, 1 HP Photosmart 2710 Multifunction, 1 Network-connected external hard drive
Wireless devices (6): 1 Apple Powerbook G4 (10.4), 1 Apple MacBook (10.5), 1 Dell laptop (unknown make; only about 6 months old, runs Vista), 1 Apple iPhone, 1 XBox360 with Wireless XBox Live adapter

Additionally, I have been trying to set up a Slingbox PRO but with my network as balky as it has been, I have been hesitant (plus I need to get a longer CAT5 cable tongue.gif).

It seems, at least from an entirely anecdotal point of view, that most of the problems occur after I shut off the XBox after playing on XBox Live. The wireless stops working other times, but it seems most frequent after this activity.

When I say "the wireless stops working," I should clarify. Every device still shows a strong connection to the router, but, for instance, when opening a web page, it will say that I am not connected to the internet. At this point I usually shut off the router, then turn it back on after 30-40 seconds. I do notice that the router feels warm when I shut it off, but I don't believe the heat buildup is the culprit in the internet failure over wireless, since it still works for the wired devices, and there is no steady degradation of performance as the router heats up: it just stops working, sometimes randomly, sometimes after doing certain things (the XBox Live issue is the only one that stands out).

I have been looking into upgrading the wireless capabilities of the network, but unfortunately, setting up and maintaining even small networks was never my area of expertise when computers are involved. My question, therefore, is this: is my problem rooted in the configuration of my network or do I need the extra bandwidth a separate wireless AP or a switch of some sort or just a more powerful router to solve the problem? Any advice would be appreciated, since I leave for school on Wednesday night and would like to have the situation settled before then.
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The Admiral
post Aug 20 2008, 07:11 AM
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From: SL,UT
OS: Windows Vista, XP, Server 2003, Mac OS classic, Mac OS 10.x



QUOTE (Gene7887 @ Aug 17 2008, 09:57 AM) *
Router: Actiontec MI424WR (came with FiOS install)
Wired devices (3): 1 Dell Dimension 4600C, 1 HP Photosmart 2710 Multifunction, 1 Network-connected external hard drive
Wireless devices (6): 1 Apple Powerbook G4 (10.4), 1 Apple MacBook (10.5), 1 Dell laptop (unknown make; only about 6 months old, runs Vista), 1 Apple iPhone, 1 XBox360 with Wireless XBox Live adapter
<snip>
do I need the extra bandwidth a separate wireless AP or a switch of some sort or just a more powerful router to solve the problem?
Yes!

An Actiontec MI424WR is not sufficient for two devices, much less eight devices, because it is also managing the internet connection. I would look into getting a seperate router to connect to the Verizon box, disable the wireless on the Verizon box, and use the other router to manage everything.
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Gene7887
post Oct 22 2008, 01:21 AM
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OS: Windows XP SP3, Mac OS X 10.4 "Tiger"



Thanks, and apologies for not responding to this until now. I just recently returned home after two months.

Does anyone suggest a router that I could purchase/set up between now and Sunday that would do the job? Cheaper would obviously be better, but I'd rather pay more for quality than a little less for junk that fails anyway.
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Titan8990
post Oct 23 2008, 12:21 PM
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Posts: 2,178
From: Louisville, Ky
OS: Windows XP Home, Ubuntu 8.04, Back Track 3, Slackware, Windows Server 2003



I would recommend one of these: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx...N82E16833124190

It is cheap and effective. Plus, if you ever get interested in it, 3rd party firmware is also available.
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ChvyKc
post Oct 23 2008, 02:14 PM
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From: Columbia, SC
OS: XP, Vista, Server 2003, Linux (Ubuntu Only)



I'm not a huge fan of Linksys but the router that Titan recommended will work great. I have a buddy running three PCs and a Xbox 360 on one of those with no problems.

I had the same type of issue that you are describing on a Belkin router. I'm now running two PCs (one wired, one wireless), two laptops (both wireless) a Xbox 360 (wired) and a Wii (wireless) on an inexpensive Netgear router with no problems. The only time my router needs to be restarted is if I lose my cable signal.
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