Wireless Woes
Wireless Woes
Hi there everyone
I have a Dell Latitude D620 laptop with some very annoying wireless problems...
For example I have tried with two networks - One at my flat and one back home, both showing similar problems so i've identified its not a problem relating to network/router configuration.
With both of these networks i can connect to them and receive an IP no problem. but my internet browsing and msn will behave irraticly ie pages sometimes wont load, i sometimes wont receive messages, i can only sometimes connect to my VPN client etc.
If i try and ping my gateway ie router I notice I will receive packet loss. If i use my wired adaptor then its fine.
Pinging my router for example will sometimes result in times of 3ms-700ms with packet loss in the reigon of 15%-70%
I've gone through the usual routine of updating drivers and re-installing the card but with no luck. My wireless network card is a Intel(R) PRO/Wireless 3945ABG.
If anyone has any ideas i would appreciate it
I have a Dell Latitude D620 laptop with some very annoying wireless problems...
For example I have tried with two networks - One at my flat and one back home, both showing similar problems so i've identified its not a problem relating to network/router configuration.
With both of these networks i can connect to them and receive an IP no problem. but my internet browsing and msn will behave irraticly ie pages sometimes wont load, i sometimes wont receive messages, i can only sometimes connect to my VPN client etc.
If i try and ping my gateway ie router I notice I will receive packet loss. If i use my wired adaptor then its fine.
Pinging my router for example will sometimes result in times of 3ms-700ms with packet loss in the reigon of 15%-70%
I've gone through the usual routine of updating drivers and re-installing the card but with no luck. My wireless network card is a Intel(R) PRO/Wireless 3945ABG.
If anyone has any ideas i would appreciate it
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close IE or whatever browser you use and do a netstat -b at the command prompt. take a look at what connections and/or listening ports are currently going. no need to paste it here for obvious reasons, but see if there's something in there that shouldn't be. you should recognize everything, and those you don't you should google.
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Might be a problem with the MTU being set incorrectly. Real Men fix that by editing the registry directly but, alternatively, you could download the TCP/IP optimizer from http://www.speedguide.net/downloads.php and have it determine the MTU value for you.
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Ok sorry it was just how you phrased it sounded like a quick fix.+JuggerNaut+ wrote:um, yeah actually it would let you know that it's most likely your built-in NIC.DiscoDave wrote:...that doesn't really help me fix the problem.
Well I cant try another nic at the moment but to be honest all signs are pointing to the onboard nic as the same problem has happened with two networks.
I've rollbacked the drivers for now and it seems to be stable, but I remember this only happened for a short while
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