Troubleshooting 93
Q9 The wireless LAN does not operate properly when there are other products
operating in the 2.4GHz band.
A
Currently, both the IEEE 802.11b and IEEE 802.11g devices are using the ISM
(industrial, scientific, and medical) band.
Therefore some channel interference may happen when there are other devices
using the same frequency band such as a wireless video transceiver, a microwave
oven, etc. If other products cause channel interference, changing the AP channel
is recommended.
Since the IEEE802.11g device operates in hybrid mode when there is an IEEE
802.11b device in operation, the data rate might decrease.
Q10 An established wireless LAN connection is disconnected after 2~3 minutes,
and the connection is not recovered.
A1
This may be caused by channel interference. Change the channel of the AP, and
reconnect.
A2
Selecting the “Use IEEE 802.1x network authentication” option in Windows XP
when IEEE 802.1x authentication is not used, may cause this phenomenon.
Check the properties of the AP in the wireless network settings. If the ’Use IEEE
802.1x authentication in this network’ option is selected, deselect the option on
the Authentication tab.
For more detailed information about authentication server, ask your network
administrator.
A3
If the AP is configured to ’Use network authentication (Shared Key)’
If the AP is configured to authentication shared mode, all computers to be
connected should be configured as follows:
- If you are using Windows XP, select network authentication(shared mode) in
the wireless network settings.
Click Start > Control Panel > Network and Internet Connections > Network
Connections. Right-click the Wireless Network Connection icon, and click View
Available Wireless Networks > Advanced. In the Wireless Networks tab, select
an AP in the Available Networks field and click Configure and select ’Network
Authentication (Shared Mode).
- For Windows 2000
(when an 11b card is used)
, check that Shared Key
Authentication has been selected in the Security settings window of the Wireless
LAN program Client Manager.
For more network authentication procedures, ask your AP (Access Point)
administrator.