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ISP drop during download Hello everybody. After reading and following several suggestions posted on the forum, the problem of dropping internet still occurs. Here are the details: Two machines: OSX 10.4.5 and Windows XP Wifi router: Netgear WGT624 w/latest firmware rev. Cable modem: RCA I used to think that the problem lied with the modem. The first few times the connections would drop, the Apple AirTunes stayed connected and streaming from iTunes to my stereo. Lately, however, even the WiFi connection dies out; the connections drop and if I disable/re-enable the AirPort card, my WFID doesn't appear. In the Netgear settings, UPnP is on; Advertising period is 30 minutes; Advertisement Time to Live is 4 hops. I tried bypassing UPnP and doing a classic port-forward, rebooted the router, connections still drop. When this happens, I notice this line appearing in the cable modem event logs: SYNC Timing Synchronization failure - Loss of Sync (date Jan 1 1970 - when modem cannot connect to Sync time server). To state the obvious, my connections drop only when Limewire is downloading a large-ish file (more than 200mb). It happens regardless if i'm running it on my Apple or Windows machine. I appreciate any input. -Rabbitoh |
It could just be a matter of bad connections or line noise… Try bypassing the Netgear anyway. :D Home routers tend to poop out with heavy traffic, showing all the symptoms you described. The weak point is the miniature motherboard of those routers. They don't pack a lot of RAM in the first place and the buffers have to share with all that software. P2P traffic is messy with small packets and UDP chatter as well as long files and it's the gateway's job to buffer parts and deliver packets once all the parts come in. Needless to say, a cup can only hold a cup. How much can your computer hold? Think of it as a big, bad, industrial strength Netgear, and you have absolute control over it. :cool: Add an old 10 or 100 Mbit card to your computer and hook that card to the modem. Just take the plug out of the Netgear's WAN port and leave that hole empty. That wire belongs to your new card now. Leave your original line to the Netgear to keep it on the air. Set the TCP on all the computers to use your 192.168.x.x internal IP address as the "Gateway" and you're set. If you use the Windows computer it's pretty easy to set yourself to gateway mode, and you can do all the portforwarding right in Windows. Any linux box can do that, of course, but if your heaviest traffic comes from the Windows box, that's the one you have to use. The Netgear is now in your digital back yard and all it has to do is glue all the computers together. This it does perfectly, and everyone gets full speed access to the internet. …of course, it could still just be a matter of bad connections or line noise… ;] |
Also what network adapter are you using. If you are using a Marvell Yukon 88E800/803/8010 PCI Gigabit Ethernet Controller you may need to install the latest driver 8.49.23 released 1/4/2006 there previous driver would drop connection during heavy downloading the newest one fixes this problem. |
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