Connectivity Issue Has Me Stumped

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  • johndavid
    New Member
    • Jul 2009
    • 2

    Connectivity Issue Has Me Stumped

    I work for as a Computer Systems Manager for a large government agency with a baffling problem.

    Some of what I will say below makes zero sense, which is why I am baffled.

    I have a site that received an Ethernet-enabled Toshiba EStudio E452. We enabled it for Ethernet and plugged it into a nearby wall jack. It does not work. The fixed IP does not ping and it picks up a 192 # on a DHCP setup.

    We have a nearby working network printer, a Lexmark T632. We take it's network cable and plug it into the Toshiba's drop. All works well. We then take the Lexmark's cable and plug the copier into the Lexmark's drop, we get both fixed IP and a valid DHCP network IP.

    We switch wires and every things the same way. It is NOT the wire.

    We run a new drop for the Toshiba and replace its NIC. No dice. We go into the Ethernet settings and try all the settings, resetting the card each time, no dice. We change ports for the Toshiba on the switch, no dice.

    One thing I notice. When an Ethernet drop works, the light on the left side stays green and the light on the right goes green intermittently and randomly. When the Toshiba is attached to its drop and not seeing the network, that right side light flashes green on a regular basis.

    What am I missing here?
    <link removed>
    Last edited by Frinavale; Jul 23 '09, 04:28 PM. Reason: Removed link. Please do not post any links that do not help in solving the problem at hand.
  • sicarie
    Recognized Expert Specialist
    • Nov 2006
    • 4677

    #2
    So let me summarize this, see if I have it correct:

    1) device will not connect w/static IP
    2) other devices will pick up DHCP or other static IPs using same port and wire
    3) configuration on first non-connective device has been reset, still does not connect
    4) NIC on first non-connective device has been replaced, still does not work

    Is that correct?

    I would check the static IP - is the other device that will pick up a static able to use the static IP you're trying to assign the non-connective device?

    Another consideration would be NIC speeds - did you just replace the first NIC with a random one (if so are the drivers set up, etc...; does the card support that model/bus/etc...), or was it the same model (if so, did you check the speed of the NIC vs speed of the cable)?

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