You have several problems to deal with.

First.  Your MX record is a DNS record on the Internet.  Whom is your ISP or
service provider.  Whom hosts your DNS (external that is)?

The addresses you assigned are not routable IP's.  This means you need to
assign a duplicate IP that is routable to the interface connected to the
internet and or obtain the NAT INFORMATION from whatever device precedes
your server (Firewall/Nat BOX/)...dunno...Only you have that info.

Several things need to happen:
You need a valid MX Record (DNS) for your Mail Exchanger
You need a valid IP Address (routable on the Internet)
This IP address has to be bound to something?
You can bind it to a firewall and forward that traffic internally
or....you can bind it to your second network card (typically a bad idea).

Does this help?

-----Original Message-----
From: Brett Wesoloski [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, November 30, 2001 3:24 PM
To: Exchange Discussions
Subject: RE: HELP Can't send mail


Where do you set the MX Record?

It probably is the ip address.  The server had two cards in it.  I just
change the new box to use the other address.

I rebuilt this box and called it the same name.  I then used 10.0.0.12 for
an ip address.  I have since changed it to 10.0.0.11 which is the other ip
address.  Still no mail.

TIA,
Brett

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