Well the thing that's weird to me about this is that there are devices on the 
LAN router currently that can access the internet just fine...so what's 
different about the TV devices when you plug them directly into the LAN router? 
 Just the IPs they're getting, which is why I suggested statically assigning 
the IP of a working LAN device to one of the TV devices and see if that 
works...you should have a computer with an IP you can spare-see what IP it has 
(as long as it can access the internet fine), take it off the network, and 
assign that IP to a TV device and see what happens (you may have to reboot to 
clear the arp cache for the DHCP lease on the router btw).

 

I assume that when you plug them into the WAN router, the TV devices get a 
192.169.3.x IP?  And that has no problem getting out? Again, pointing to the 
IPs being an issue...

 

Could you somehow not be NAT'ing all of the 192.168.1.x address space?  That 
could cause the problem; original LAN devices are getting IPs that are being 
NAT'ed but the TV devices aren't b/c they're too high or something...oh, and 
you just have one public IP right? It's not like you have multiple statically 
assigned public IPs that are running out or something?

 

Have you reviewed the config on the LAN router to see if it's a config issue 
blocking access?  Maybe reset it to factory defaults and see if that helps?

 

BINO


 
> Date: Wed, 21 Apr 2010 12:51:38 -0700
> To: [email protected]
> From: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [H] Network issue
> 
> At 12:06 PM 4/21/2010, you wrote:
> >>I actually tried taking the switch out of the loop and plugging the 
> >>TV directly into the LAN router but it no change. But when I move 
> >>the CAT cable to the WAN router I am good.
> >
> >Can you do a retask of devices? Save current configurations of the 
> >routers and then reverse them, putting the LAN router in place where 
> >the WAN router is and then the WAN where the LAN is. Seems to me it 
> >is something in the LAN router causing the issue.
> 
> 
> >Do you have a spare router you can just replace the LAN router with?
> 
> 
> 
> I think you're right Chris, after I wrote the last reply I came to 
> the same conclusion. I can swap out that router with another exact 
> duplicate Linksys WRT54G I happen to have and I will give that a try 
> as soon as I can afford to bring my network down for a while.
> 
> thanks
> w
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> >Firmware on LAN router?
> >
> >Possible Packet Filtering on LAN router?
> >
> >Anything show up in the log for the LAN router?
> >
> >
> >Christopher Fisk
> >--
> >Thank you, Bill Cosby, you saved the Simpsons!
> > -- Homer Simpson, Saturdays of Thunder
> 
                                          

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