Newbie here, so please be gentle...
Bought two D-Line 500Mbps PowerLine adapters to use in my 3,000 sq ft 19th century Victorian row house. Plugged one into the wall, then into the router in my office, the other into the wall in the room where I wanted to test performance. Configured per instructions, all the LEDs on both glowing a nice steady green. Verified that the router was sending good IP data to the "home" adapter. Nothing but bogus IP addresses coming out of the remote box, however. More specifically, there are no IP addresses coming out, so the laptop eventually gives itself one.
Called D-Link tech support, who report that the devices won't work if they aren't plugged into the same circuit. Right. I've got 15+ circuits in my house; even my 1990s-era town home back in Virginia had six or eight. What are the odds that two arbitrary rooms will be on the same one? Not good, in my experience.
Is this problem peculiar to these D-Link boxes, or is it universal? If the latter, it would seem to really limit the utility of the technology. What am I missing?
UPDATE: Tried plugging the "remote" adapter into outlets in the same room and an adjacent room, with the same unsatisfactory results. Still can't get an IP address. Which may suggest that I'm doing something screwy...or that my house is wired even more crazily than I thought. Suggestions?
Bought two D-Line 500Mbps PowerLine adapters to use in my 3,000 sq ft 19th century Victorian row house. Plugged one into the wall, then into the router in my office, the other into the wall in the room where I wanted to test performance. Configured per instructions, all the LEDs on both glowing a nice steady green. Verified that the router was sending good IP data to the "home" adapter. Nothing but bogus IP addresses coming out of the remote box, however. More specifically, there are no IP addresses coming out, so the laptop eventually gives itself one.
Called D-Link tech support, who report that the devices won't work if they aren't plugged into the same circuit. Right. I've got 15+ circuits in my house; even my 1990s-era town home back in Virginia had six or eight. What are the odds that two arbitrary rooms will be on the same one? Not good, in my experience.
Is this problem peculiar to these D-Link boxes, or is it universal? If the latter, it would seem to really limit the utility of the technology. What am I missing?
UPDATE: Tried plugging the "remote" adapter into outlets in the same room and an adjacent room, with the same unsatisfactory results. Still can't get an IP address. Which may suggest that I'm doing something screwy...or that my house is wired even more crazily than I thought. Suggestions?
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