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Originally Posted by ddun2u Any ideas?? |
Below is a general overview of what typically would need to be done. The process may need adjustment for your particular network arrangement. What wasn't done?
Step 1: Connect Router to Computer
Connect computer's wired network adapter to one of the LAN ports on the router with an Ethernet cable. Then configure the computer's network adapter to use the same LAN subnet as the router. The router defaults to using the 192.168.0.0/24 subnet. So, configure the computer's network adapter to use any IP address between 192.168.0.2 and 192.168.0.254 with a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0 and a default gateway of 192.168.0.1 (the router).
Then verify access to the router's web based configuration utility by following the instructions on page 13 of the manual. Once the router can be accessed proceed to the next step.
Step 2: Update router firmware
Download the firmware again noting where it was saved on your computer. The firmware comes as a compressed .ZIP archive. The archive will need to be unzipped to yield the single firmware image file contained within. Then access the web based configuration utility as done in step 1 and follow the firmware update instructions on page 33 of the manual. Cross your fingers and reboot the router using the reboot option from the configuration utility's Tools page. Once router comes up re-verify access to the web based configuration utility. Once router can be accessed, proceed to next step.
Step 3: Install Verizon card and configure
Turn router off and install Verizon card as described on page 10 of manual, then turn router on and configure card as described on page 17 of manual.
Step 4: Configure wireless LAN
If you have computers that will connect wirelessly to the router, configure the wireless features for security as desired (pages 18-19, 28 in manual). If no computers will connect wirelessly, disable the wireless feature to prevent your neighbors from getting free Internet access.