WEP Keys
An 802.11b device with WEP enabled uses a WEP Key (also known as an Encryption
Key) to encrypt and decrypt information. If the WEP Keys do not match on two radios
and WEP Encryption is enabled, the two devices will be unable to associate and/or
exchange data (depending on the WEP Encryption setting).
Use the same WEP Key(s) on all of the 802.11b devices on your network.
Note:
In order to communicate when WEP is enabled, all 802.11b devices on the
same network must use the same default WEP Key.
For 40-bit encryption, the WEP Key is expressed as 5 sets of two hexadecimal digits
(0-9 and A-F). The Harmony 802.11b Access Point can store up to four 40-bit WEP
Keys.
For 128-bit encryption, the WEP Key is expressed as 13 sets of two hexadecimal digits
(0-9 and A-F). The Harmony 802.11b Access Point can store up to four 128-bit WEP
Keys.
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