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Troubleshooting
121
R6250 Smart WiFi Router
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 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 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 router and your computer are correct and that the
addresses are on the same subnet.
Test the Path from Your Computer to a Remote Device
After verifying 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 Windows Run window, 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 like those shown in the previous section are
displayed.
If you do not receive replies:
Check that your computer has the IP address of your router listed as the default gateway.
If the IP configuration of your computer is assigned by DHCP, this information is not
visible in your computer Network Control Panel. Verify that the IP address of the router is
listed as the default gateway.
Check to see that the network address of your computer (the portion of the IP address
specified by the subnet mask) is different from the network address of the remote device.
Check that your cable or DSL modem is connected and functioning.
If your ISP assigned a host name to your computer, enter that host name as the account
name in the Internet Setup screen.
Your ISP could 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
broadband modem. Some ISPs additionally restrict access to the MAC address of a single
computer connected to that modem. If so, configure your router to “clone” or “spoof” the MAC
address from the authorized computer.
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123
A
A.
Supplemental Information
This appendix covers the following topics:
Factory Settings
Technical Specifications
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Supplemental Information
124
R6250 Smart WiFi Router
Factory Settings
You can return the router to its factory settings. Use the end of a paper clip or a similar object
to press and hold the
Reset
button on the back of the router for at least 7 seconds. The router
resets, and returns to the factory configuration settings shown in the following table.
Table 3.
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
Internet
connection
WAN MAC address
Use default hardware address
WAN MTU size
1500
Port speed
AutoSensing
Local network
(LAN)
LAN IP
192.168.1.1
Subnet mask
255.255.255.0
DHCP server
Enabled
DHCP range
192.168.1.2 to 192.168.1.254
Time zone
Pacific time
Time zone daylight savings time
Disabled
Allow a registrar to configure this
router
Enabled
Local network
(LAN) continued
DHCP starting IP address
192.168.1.2
DHCP ending IP address
192.168.1.254
DMZ
Disabled
Time zone
GMT for WW except NA and GR, GMT+1 for GR, GMT-8
for NA
Time zone adjusted for daylight
savings time
Disabled
SNMP
Disabled
Firewall
Inbound (communications coming
in from the Internet)
Disabled (except traffic on port 80, the HTTP port)
Outbound (communications going
out to the Internet)
Enabled (all)
Source MAC filtering
Disabled
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Supplemental Information
125
R6250 Smart WiFi Router
Wireless
Wireless communication
Enabled
SSID name
See router label
Security
WPA2-PSK (AES)
Broadcast SSID
Enabled
Transmission speed
Auto
*
Country/region
United States in the US; otherwise varies by region
RF channel
6 until region selected
Operating mode
Up to 145 Mbps at 2.4 GHz, 1300 Mbps at 5 GHz
Firewall
Inbound (communications coming
in from the Internet)
Disabled (bars all unsolicited requests)
Outbound (communications going
out to the Internet)
Enabled (all)
*. Maximum wireless signal rate derived from IEEE Standard 802.11 specifications. Actual throughput can vary.
Network conditions and environmental factors, including volume of network traffic, building materials and
construction, and network overhead, lower actual data throughput rate.
Table 3.
Factory default settings
(continued)
Feature
Default behavior
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Supplemental Information
126
R6250 Smart WiFi Router
Technical Specifications
Table 4.
R6250 Router specifications
Feature
Description
Data and routing protocols
TCP/IP, RIP-1, RIP-2, DHCP, PPPoE, PPTP, Bigpond, Dynamic DNS, UPnP,
and SMB
Power adapter
North America: 120V, 60 Hz, input
UK, Australia: 240V, 50 Hz, input
Europe: 230V, 50 Hz, input
All regions (output): 12V DC @ 2.5A, output
Dimensions
Dimensions: 195 x 199 x 65 mm (7.68 x 7.84 x 2.56 in)
Weight
Weight: 417 (0.92l b)
Operating temperature
0° to 40° C
(32º to 104º F)
Operating humidity
90% maximum relative humidity, noncondensing
Electromagnetic emissions
FCC Part 15 Class B
VCCI Class B
EN 55 022 (CISPR 22), Class B C-Tick N10947
LAN
10BASE-T or 100BASE-TX or 1000BASE-T, RJ-45
WAN
10BASE-T or 100BASE-TX or 1000BASE-T, RJ-45
Wireless
Maximum wireless signal rate complies with the IEEE 802.11 standard. See the
footnote for the previous table.
Radio data rates
Auto Rate Sensing
Data encoding standards
IEEE 802.11ac 2.0
IEEE 802.11n version 2.0
IEEE 802.11n, IEEE 802.11g, IEEE 802.11b 2.4 GHz
IEEE 802.11n, IEEE 802.11a 5.0 GHz
Maximum computers per
wireless network
Limited by the amount of wireless network traffic generated by each node
(typically 50–70 nodes).

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