Shopping & Style1 min ago
Dabbled.
31 Answers
Dabbled in wireless broadband house networking.
Windows 7.
Bought 2 7day 85MBPS plugs attached to a D-Link router and the other to a Linksys cisco router and plugged in.
Both plugs lit up Power and ethernet. but neither lit up Data.
Any ideas?
Windows 7.
Bought 2 7day 85MBPS plugs attached to a D-Link router and the other to a Linksys cisco router and plugged in.
Both plugs lit up Power and ethernet. but neither lit up Data.
Any ideas?
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Firstly ignore the second "router" for the time being, it's not needed to get the home plugs working.
Plug one of the home plugs into your main router that provides your internet t the house and plug it into a socket nearby, then plug the second one into a socket in the same room and connect your laptop to it directly using a ethernet cable and see if you get a link like that.
If you do then relocate the second plug to the room you want to use it in and try it again without changing anything other than the physical location of the plug.
(also can you provide a link to the exact plugs you bought and the make and models of both "routers")
Plug one of the home plugs into your main router that provides your internet t the house and plug it into a socket nearby, then plug the second one into a socket in the same room and connect your laptop to it directly using a ethernet cable and see if you get a link like that.
If you do then relocate the second plug to the room you want to use it in and try it again without changing anything other than the physical location of the plug.
(also can you provide a link to the exact plugs you bought and the make and models of both "routers")
I'm a little worried about you using the phrase "router"
If it is a router connect it to the LAN port on the router, not to the internet port and then you'd have to go into the settings for the second router and disable DHCP so the giving of an IP address is handled by the first router otherwise it won't work or at best, work very badly.
If it's actually a wireless access point and not a router ignore what I've just said :)
If it is a router connect it to the LAN port on the router, not to the internet port and then you'd have to go into the settings for the second router and disable DHCP so the giving of an IP address is handled by the first router otherwise it won't work or at best, work very badly.
If it's actually a wireless access point and not a router ignore what I've just said :)
-- answer removed --
chuck.....don't give up on me:
//If they don't link when on different floors then your upstairs and downstairs mains circuits are probably separated and you'll be out of luck :(///
But if the upstairs laptop works with the Ethernet cable attached to the Laptop, then the main circuits CAN'T be separate.......can they?
//If they don't link when on different floors then your upstairs and downstairs mains circuits are probably separated and you'll be out of luck :(///
But if the upstairs laptop works with the Ethernet cable attached to the Laptop, then the main circuits CAN'T be separate.......can they?