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EnGenius EOC-2610 802.11b/g Wireless Access Point Questions & Answers
I'm using MAC filtering on
To be honest, it sounds like, though he put in the WEP key, his phone was actually logged in via 3g rather than 803.11
Just because you set it up to connect using wireless routing doesn't mean that it does. Many phones are pre programmed to favor their 3g or 4g networks rather than 803.11.
5/4/2011 6:29:18 AM •
EnGenius...
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Answered
on May 04, 2011
I cant configure the EOC
To start set the IP in your computer to 192.168.1.21, Subnet: 255.255.255.0 don't worry about the Gateway or DNS.
Connect one end of a network cable to the network port on the bottom of the Engenius.
Connect the other end of the cable to the POE port on the power inserter.
Plug in the 24Vdc cable and power supply.
Connect another network cable to the LAN side of the power inserter and the LAN port of your computer.
Now we can try to ping the Engenius.(This is a test to see if the computer and the Engenius are able to communicate)
Go to Start on your computer.
In "Search" Type in: cmd
Click on the "cmd.exe" program.
A black box will pop up.
Type in: ping(space)192.168.1.1
You should see: Reply from 192.168.1.1: bytes:32 time:1ms ttl:52
This means you're connected to, and can communicate with the Engenius.
Your sending a request to the Engenius and It's sending a reply back.
Now open Internet Explorer.
Type in: 192.168.1.1 in the address bar at the top of the screen.(don't worry about HTTP or any of that, it's not needed)
A box will pop up asking for a username and password.
Type in admin for both and hit enter.
make sure, Windows Firewall is disable on your machine....
Please rate this , if you like
Thanks
Sandeep
3/9/2011 3:49:03 PM •
EnGenius...
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Answered
on Mar 09, 2011
Trying to connect Blackberry to
It sounds like your AP is not set up to be a DHCP server. If you want to use devices with your AP that expect to receive addresses over DHCP, then you either have to enable the DHCP server on your AP, or enable one somewhere else on your network to which your AP provides access.
11/1/2010 3:25:51 AM •
EnGenius...
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Answered
on Nov 01, 2010
We are attempting to install
What model access point are you trying to get it to connect to?
On the EOC-1650, go to the Wireless Network page and click the Site Survey button. This should show you all the APs that are visible to the unit. If you don't see any, either the radio in your 1650 is blown, or your AP isn't set up correctly (to determine which, get close to your AP with your PC and see if it shows up on your PC's wireless screen). If you do see the AP, click the BSSID value to attempt to connect to the AP. The error message, if any, will tell you where to look for your connection problem (password, encryption type, etc.)
10/27/2010 8:12:34 PM •
EnGenius...
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Answered
on Oct 27, 2010
WDS Setup
In a WDS network, all the access points need to be in WDS mode, and one of them needs to be wired directly to a routed internet connection.
Here is a very good detailed tutorial on how WDS works and how to configure and troubleshoot your own WDS network:
How To: Setting up WDS Bridging / Repeating
6/17/2010 6:04:59 PM •
EnGenius...
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Answered
on Jun 17, 2010
How to setup internet between 2 EnGenius EOC-2610 devices?
Thanks for a very thorough problem report. It's a little ambiguous near the end, though, so I will have to restate what I think I understand you are saying.
You are saying that you have your internet connection and AP in one building, and two devices or PCs in that building can access the internet and share files (though you don't specify if they are using the EOC-2610 access point or are just accessing the router in some other fashion). But you have a remote building where there is one PC and one EOC-2610 in Client Bridge mode, and although both EOC-2610 units seem to be communicating with each other, the PC will not communicate with anything. (I presume you have inspected the access point's configuration screens and verified that it does have the other EOC-2610 listed as a connected client.)
First, the PC in the remote building has to be connected to the Client Bridge EOC-2610 by its ethernet cable in order to access the network. Second, the PC in the remote building has to have a valid IP address in the range 192.168.0.0/24, or it won't communicate with anything. If you are relying on your router's DHCP to assign your PC an IP address, verify that this has happened by examining your PC network properties. If you are assigning all IP addresses manually, make sure you have assigned the PC an address, and one that doesn't duplicate some other device.
Sometimes failure to specify DNS servers appears to be a lack of communication with the network. Open a browser and type 66.70.119.204 in the URL bar. If you get to fixya.com, you have a good network connection. If you type fixya.com in the URL bar and can't get the same result, you need to define DNS servers on the PC (or inside your router).
6/17/2010 5:56:28 PM •
EnGenius...
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Answered
on Jun 17, 2010
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