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Troubleshooting
196
N600 and AC750 WiFi DSL Modem Routers
Troubleshoot Your Network Using the Ping Utility
Most network devices and routers contain a ping utility that sends an echo request packet to
the designated device. The device then responds with an echo reply. You can easily
troubleshoot a network using the ping utility in your computer or workstation.
Test the LAN Path to Your Modem Router
You can ping the modem router from your computer to verify that the LAN path to your
modem router is set up correctly.
To ping the modem router from a Windows computer:
1.
From the Windows taskbar, click the
Start
button and select
Run
.
2.
In the field provided, type
ping
followed by the IP address of the modem router, as in this
example:
ping 192.168.1.1
3.
Click the
OK
button.
A message such as the following one displays:
Pinging <IP address> with 32 bytes of data
If the path is working, you see this message:
Reply from < IP address >: bytes=32 time=NN ms TTL=xxx
If the path is not working, you see this message:
Request timed out
If the path is not functioning correctly, one of the following problems might be occurring:
Wrong physical connections
For a wired connection, make sure that the numbered LAN port LED is lit for the port to
which you are connected.
Check that the appropriate LEDs are on for your network devices. If your modem router
and computer are connected to a separate Ethernet switch, make sure that the link LEDs
are lit for the switch ports that are connected to your computer and modem router.
Wrong network configuration
Verify that the Ethernet card driver software and TCP/IP software are both installed and
configured on your computer.
Verify that the IP address for your modem router and your computer are correct and that
the addresses are on the same subnet.
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Troubleshooting
197
N600 and AC750 WiFi DSL Modem Routers
Test the Path from Your Computer to a Remote Device
After you verify that the LAN path works correctly, test the path from your computer to a
remote device:
1.
From the Windows toolbar, click the
Start
button and select
Run
.
2.
In the field provided, type
ping -n 10
IP address
where
IP address
is the IP address of a remote device such as your ISP’s DNS server.
If the path is functioning correctly, replies as described in
Test the LAN Path to Your Modem
Router
on page
196 display. If you do not receive replies, do the following:
Check that the IP address of your modem router is listed as the default router in your
computer. If the IP configuration of your computer is assigned by DHCP, this information
is not visible in your computer’s Network Control Panel. Verify that the IP address of the
modem router is listed as the default router.
Check that the network address of your computer (the portion of the IP address specified
by the netmask) is different from the network address of the remote device.
If your ISP assigned a host name to your computer, enter that host name as the account
name (see
Manually Set Up the Internet Connection
on page
44).
Your ISP might be rejecting the Ethernet MAC addresses of all but one of your
computers.
Many broadband ISPs restrict access by allowing traffic only from the MAC address of
your modem, but some additionally restrict access to the MAC address of a single
computer connected to that modem. In this case, configure your modem router to clone
or spoof the MAC address from the authorized computer (see
Manually Set Up the
Internet Connection
on page
44).
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198
A
A.
Supplemental Information
This appendix covers the following topics:
Factory Settings
Technical and Environmental Specifications
Page 199 / 202
Supplemental Information
199
N600 and AC750 WiFi DSL Modem Routers
Factory Settings
You can return the modem router to its factory default settings (see
Return the Modem
Router to Its Factory Default Settings
on page
155). The following table shows the factory
default settings.
Table 4.
Factory default settings
Feature
Default Behavior
Router Login
User login URL
www.routerlogin.com or www.routerlogin.net
User name (case-sensitive)
admin
Login password (case-sensitive)
password
Remote management
Disabled
Internet connection
Physical WAN type of connection
ADSL2+
Use of Ethernet port LAN4 WAN
LAN
Network Address Translation (NAT)
Enabled
WAN MAC address
Use default hardware address
Local area network (LAN)
LAN IP address
192.168.1.1
Subnet mask
255.255.255.0
DHCP server
Enabled
DHCP range
192.168.1.2 to 192.168.1.254
DHCP start IP address
192.168.1.2
DHCP end IP address
192.168.1.254
UPnP
Disabled
Wide area network (WAN)
WAN MTU size
1500
Port scan and DoS protection
Enabled
Respond to ping on Internet port
Disabled
IGMP proxying
Disabled
NAT filtering
Open
SIP ALG
Enabled
Page 200 / 202
Supplemental Information
200
N600 and AC750 WiFi DSL Modem Routers
VPN pass-through
Enabled for IPSec, PPTP, and L2TP
Main WiFi network
Country/region
Varies by region
WiFi radios
Enabled
SSID name
See product label
Broadcast SSID
Enabled (both radios)
Wireless isolation
Disabled (both radios)
Security
WPA2-PSK (AES)
WiFi network key (passphrase)
See product label
RF channel
2.4 GHz band: Auto
5 GHz band: Auto
Operating mode
1
N600 WiFi DSL Modem Router, Model D3600:
-
2.4 GHz band: Up to 145 Mbps
-
5 GHz band: Up to 300 Mbps
AC750 WiFi DSL Modem Router, Model D6000:
-
2.4 GHz band: Up to 145 Mbps
-
5 GHz band: Up to 433 Mbps
Guest WiFi network
WiFi communication
Disabled (both radios)
SSID name
2.4 GHz band:
-
NETGEAR-Guest
-
NETGEAR-Guest2
-
NETGEAR-Guest3
5 GHz band:
-
NETGEAR-5G-Guest
-
NETGEAR-5G-Guest2
-
NETGEAR-5G-Guest3
Broadcast SSID
Enabled (both radios)
Allow guests to access main
network
Disabled (both radios)
Wireless isolation
Disabled (both radios)
Security
None (open network)
Table 4.
Factory default settings (continued)
Feature
Default Behavior

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