• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

New computer hangs router???

AnitaPeterson

Diamond Member
Hi there,

For almost three years, I've had a router (DL-604) to which I've been connecting my two computers and, occasionally, my laptop.

However, my new seconday machine (Barton 2500+/Abit NF7-S) is killing my internet connection, and this drives me crazy.

Every time I start the new computer, it takes only a couple of minutes of being logged into Windows before I see the message "Network connection unplugged", and the red icon appearing in my taskbar. Then it goes away, but the internet connection is gone for good.

If I check the other computer, it can't go on the internet, either.

I have to turn off the secondary machine, unplug the modem and the router from the wall outlet, than start them up one more time, before I can use the Internet again.

What is going on???! 😕
 
You also might want to post this in the Networking Sub here on the BBS. You might get more help there.
That is a strange problem. I can't see how that new system is doing something to make the router drop connection.

 
I can definitely see how a bad NIC card could kill the router...if you have another NIC card you can put in that box, I would try that first.
 
Well, the old computer worked perfectly... so I'm afraid it IS the drivers, indeed.

How do I go about installing new drivers - do I have to uninstall the old ones or can I just update them? I saw at nforcersHQ.com that there re some appreciated "remix drivers" by Morpheus, which use the most stable versions for audio, NIC etc. They come in an .exe package - I suppose all I have to do is launch it?
 
Bah, I found what was wrong with the damn thing - the network adapter was set as "auto-negotiate", which probably meant it was sending/getting too much data from my DSL connection - once I set it at "100 full duplex", it all went well.
 
Back
Top