Ok, two pretty identical setups: one at home, one at work. Multiple pc's, cable moden, 4 port router + wifi, network printer.
The printer is plugged into the router and given an address (like 168.192.1.4). The weird thing is that the address will change to something like 168.192.1.7 without me doing anything. Windows doesn't correct this mistake (xp at work, vista at home).
My limited network knowledge thought that the wired ports were constant. ie.
port 1 = 168.192.1.1
port 2 = 168.192.1.2
port 3 = 168.192.1.3
port 4 = 168.192.1.4
but obviously that isn't the case. The hardware is completely different at the two locations. (belkin and netgear routers, oki and samsung laser printers).
Any thoughts on what is going on? I'm pretty sure that if I look hard enough into the router's setup I can lock a device's port, but i'm more interested in learning why this is happening. It happens about once a month or less.
The port number has nothing to do with the IP address. The router is assigned an IP address through DHCP. Change the printer's IP address to a static one that's outside the DHCP range.
I'm reading up more on DHCP now. I'm not sure what value to assign the printer but I'm pretty confident i can figure it out.
Still not sure why it would get assigned .7 when I only have 5 total devices attached but I guess it doesn't matter much.
DHCP assignments generally are good for a while, like a few days. removing devices doesnt remove the assignment until the time on the assignment runs out. As long as you set the static IP address of the printer outside of the dhcp range you will be fine.
Thanks for both the replies. I guess it was kind of a beginners question. I don't do much network setup but have been using both of these routers for a couple of years and since I never had a network printer before, i never ran into this.
You are about to answer a thread that has been inactive for more than 6 months. If you still wish to proceed, please ensure that your posting is original and does not duplicate or overlap any prior responses to this thread.