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I have never lost my internal MACs. I’ve
been using sB devices only for about 11 months now. I have seen and heard of everything…but
I have not heard of an aPPo losing the internal MAC addresses. Have you loaded up the 1.08 firmware on
your client device? Have you tried unplugging it for anywhere
from 10 seconds to 15 minutes? Can you PING your
client device? Can you log into the client device? Can you do a “restore to factory
default” on it (assuming you used simpleDeploy)? Try starting a continuous Do you have the latest firmware on the
aPPo? Is their tooooo
much interference in your area to allow association from your client device?? If all this don’t work, then you may
have a bad aPPo. Sully -----Original Message----- I store authorized MACS
on my AP's and my my server. Yesterday I lost connection to the head end
AP. I can see it at 100% RSSI and 80 to 90 Link Quality but cannot
associate. Could the AP have lost
the MAC "authorisation" (notice the spelling) and went back to the
default FF FF FF FF etc? I hope not because this would be scary to use
this feature again. t Any help or input is
appreciated. I am currently down all the way around and just sitting on
my duff until the city opens on Monday morning when the Tower is
accessible. I am thinking of using a
true backhaul with other devices and simply connecting the SB devices to a
switch for distribution. Anyone else doing this also? |
- [smartBridges] After f/w upgrade can't pass data Bobby Bounds
- [smartBridges] Storing MAC authorized MAC on the... Rudolph Worrell
- RE: [smartBridges] Storing MAC authorized MA... The Wirefree Network
- RE: [smartBridges] Storing MAC authorize... Rudolph Worrell
