Test The Lan Path To Your Router; Test The Path From Your Computer To A Remote Device - NETGEAR DGND4000 User Manual

N750 wireless dual band gigabit dsl modem router—premium edition
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N750 Wireless Dual Band Gigabit ADSL Modem Router DGND4000

Test the LAN Path to Your Router

You can ping the wireless modem router from your computer to verify that the LAN path to
your wireless modem router is set up correctly.
To ping the wireless modem router from a computer running Windows:
1.
From the Windows toolbar, click Start, and then select Run.
2.
In the field provided, type ping followed by the IP address of the wireless modem router, as
in this example:
ping www.routerlogin.net
3.
Click OK.
You should see a message like this one:
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, you could have one of the following problems:
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 lit for your network devices. If your wireless modem
router and computer are connected to a separate Ethernet switch, make sure that the
Ethernet LEDs are lit for the switch ports that are connected to your computer and
wireless 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 wireless modem 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 then select Run.
2.
In the Windows Run window, type:
ping -n 10 <IP address>
Troubleshooting
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