Hi Richard,

The URL 192.168.xxx.xxx is a standard address that all routers are set to from the factory.  Usually few people ever changes that, so most likely it is your router's address that it is referring to.

I think that a first step would be to unplug your router, wait 2 minutes, and then plug it back in and see if it clear some funny mode that it may have gotten into.  Failing that you may want to investigate to see if there is some problem with the instrument that is attached to that 192.168.1.251 address on your router.  Perhaps it is your Arduino time server which may have a problem. Failing that it may be a problem with your firewall assignments.

Then ask for more help!


Good luck,


Bill....WB6BNQ


On 1/26/2020 4:53 PM, Richard Mogford wrote:
Hello I am using a program called Faros to monitor ham radio signals. It relies on accurate time. I built an Arduino time server from the instructions here: https://ukmeteornetwork.co.uk/news/arduino-time-server/ Faros runs a check on all available NTP servers connected to the PC. For some reason, it can no longer contact “localhost,” which I think is the PC’s time service. Can anyone help me figure out what happened to localhost? Also, is there a good program to monitor the time signals from the Arduino server? I have it plugged into my WiFi router. I am trying Dimension 4, but it cannot contact the time server at 192.168.1.251. Richard _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list -- [email protected] To unsubscribe, go to http://lists.febo.com/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts_lists.febo.com and follow the instructions there.
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