Thread: Please Help
View Single Post
Old 16-02-2008, 19:20   #10
Cobbydaler
Inactive
 
Cobbydaler's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Manchester, UK
Services: ClearFibre Internet, Vodafone mobile Google Pixel 4
Posts: 9,699
Cobbydaler is seeing silvered starsCobbydaler is seeing silvered starsCobbydaler is seeing silvered starsCobbydaler is seeing silvered stars
Cobbydaler is seeing silvered starsCobbydaler is seeing silvered starsCobbydaler is seeing silvered starsCobbydaler is seeing silvered starsCobbydaler is seeing silvered starsCobbydaler is seeing silvered starsCobbydaler is seeing silvered starsCobbydaler is seeing silvered starsCobbydaler is seeing silvered starsCobbydaler is seeing silvered starsCobbydaler is seeing silvered starsCobbydaler is seeing silvered starsCobbydaler is seeing silvered starsCobbydaler is seeing silvered starsCobbydaler is seeing silvered stars
Re: Please Help

Quote:
Originally Posted by STONEISLAND View Post
I have a D LINK router how do I do that? Tried google no luck??

---------- Post added at 17:23 ---------- Previous post was at 17:17 ----------

http://www.dlink.com/products/?sec=0&pid=530

The above is my router. I'm about 10 feet away from where I normally have it and its fine. I put it on my desk and I lose it. So frustrating!!!!
From your router's manual:

Quote:
1. Keep the number of walls and ceilings between the D-Link router and other network devices to a minimum
- each wall or ceiling can reduce your adapter’s range from 3-90 feet (1-30 meters.) Position your devices
so that the number of walls or ceilings is minimized.
2. Be aware of the direct line between network devices. A wall that is 1.5 feet thick (.5 meters), at a
45-degree angle appears to be almost 3 feet (1 meter) thick. At a 2-degree angle it looks over 42 feet
(14 meters) thick! Position devices so that the signal will travel straight through a wall or ceiling (instead
of at an angle) for better reception.
3. Building Materials make a difference. A solid metal door or aluminum studs may have a negative effect on
range. Try to position access points, wireless routers, and computers so that the signal passes through
drywall or open doorways. Materials and objects such as glass, steel, metal, walls with insulation, water
(fish tanks), mirrors, file cabinets, brick, and concrete will degrade your wireless signal.
4. Keep your product away (at least 3-6 feet or 1-2 meters) from electrical devices or appliances that
generate RF noise.
5. If you are using 2.4GHz cordless phones or X-10 (wireless products such as ceiling fans, lights, and
home security systems), your wireless connection may degrade dramatically or drop completely. Make
sure your 2.4GHz phone base is as far away from your wireless devices as possible. The base transmits
a signal even if the phone in not in use.
Make sure you take note of the above...

Before you do any of the below, make sure you know how to use the wireless network interface configuration tool on your laptop to change the channel as well. Once you've changed it in the router you'll lose connection to the laptop until you've changed it there. The only way round that is to connect to the router with a cat5e cable when you make your changes.

To change the channel enter 192.168.0.1 in your browser's address bar. Choose Admin as the user & leave the password blank.

Then select Manual Configuration.

Choose Wireless Settings from the panel on the left.

Select a different wireless channel (6 is the default, try 2 or 10 first).
Cobbydaler is offline   Reply With Quote