Hello,
I've got a problem that has probably been raised here before but I can't seem to find it. My apologies for starting a new thread on an old topic.
I need HELP!
My setup: I've hooked my linksys WRT54G router into a Qwest DSL Arescom modem. The wrt54g router has the following settings:
Basic Setup > IP: 192.168.0.1 (changed from default setting, suggested by linksys, because the 192.168.1.1 address interferes with the Arescom).
Basic Setup >MTU is set to Auto
Basic Setup > DHCP is enabled
Basic Setup >Time zone is set to CST (my timezone)
DDNS > disabled
MAC Address Clone > disabled (I'm not really sure what that would do anyway)
Advanced Routing > Operating Mode = Gateway
Firmware is 4.20.7
The problem: My ethernet connect Macs have a valid IP address assigned by the router. However, the connection speed is S-L-O-W. Yet, when I unplug the wrt54g from the DSL modem and plug my Mac's ethernet cable into the DSL modem, the speed is as fast as can be. So I know it's not the DSL modem, the problem is somewhere in the router.
What I've tested:
1) I've plugged my Wintel laptop into the wrt54g. The speed is as fast as can be. So, it must be a Mac issue.
2) I've used different cables, no difference.
3) I've restarted and restarted (which I don't think is necessary since I'm running 10.4.4). - nothing changes
4) I've disabled the Mac's firewall - nothing changes
5) I've connected wirelessly through airport. The connection still seems slow, though I can't really compare this to my Wintel laptop because my 5 year old Mac laptop is using the older, slower wireless protocol (I can't remember the exact code) and for some reason I can't get my desktop Mac to connect through airport, even after restarting and disconnecting the ethernet cable.
6) I've switched the linksys router's MTU to Manual and set it1500.
Clearly there must be some setting that's not right and it seems to be isolated to Macs - I'd hazard to guess both wirelessly and wired. The very pleasant support person in India or somewhere could only offer that they don't have the expertise to support Mac OS X at this time or something along those lines.
Any suggestions. I'll even entertain buying a completely different router that has wireless capability. I've lost a least 1/2 days work on the darn thing and need to get up and running.
Thanks!
I've got a problem that has probably been raised here before but I can't seem to find it. My apologies for starting a new thread on an old topic.
I need HELP!
My setup: I've hooked my linksys WRT54G router into a Qwest DSL Arescom modem. The wrt54g router has the following settings:
Basic Setup > IP: 192.168.0.1 (changed from default setting, suggested by linksys, because the 192.168.1.1 address interferes with the Arescom).
Basic Setup >MTU is set to Auto
Basic Setup > DHCP is enabled
Basic Setup >Time zone is set to CST (my timezone)
DDNS > disabled
MAC Address Clone > disabled (I'm not really sure what that would do anyway)
Advanced Routing > Operating Mode = Gateway
Firmware is 4.20.7
The problem: My ethernet connect Macs have a valid IP address assigned by the router. However, the connection speed is S-L-O-W. Yet, when I unplug the wrt54g from the DSL modem and plug my Mac's ethernet cable into the DSL modem, the speed is as fast as can be. So I know it's not the DSL modem, the problem is somewhere in the router.
What I've tested:
1) I've plugged my Wintel laptop into the wrt54g. The speed is as fast as can be. So, it must be a Mac issue.
2) I've used different cables, no difference.
3) I've restarted and restarted (which I don't think is necessary since I'm running 10.4.4). - nothing changes
4) I've disabled the Mac's firewall - nothing changes
5) I've connected wirelessly through airport. The connection still seems slow, though I can't really compare this to my Wintel laptop because my 5 year old Mac laptop is using the older, slower wireless protocol (I can't remember the exact code) and for some reason I can't get my desktop Mac to connect through airport, even after restarting and disconnecting the ethernet cable.
6) I've switched the linksys router's MTU to Manual and set it1500.
Clearly there must be some setting that's not right and it seems to be isolated to Macs - I'd hazard to guess both wirelessly and wired. The very pleasant support person in India or somewhere could only offer that they don't have the expertise to support Mac OS X at this time or something along those lines.
Any suggestions. I'll even entertain buying a completely different router that has wireless capability. I've lost a least 1/2 days work on the darn thing and need to get up and running.
Thanks!