The Graveyard - Products No Longer Supported > DIR-810L

Problem with 810L after power surge

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zypa:
Hello there, I am new to the forum and already with a problem.

I am having this router (810L) and I noticed that after a power outage the router does not self reconnect to the internet if not manually reset again. The power led is green but the globe (internet indicator led) is orange.
The firmware is 2.03 and it has already the "auto connect to the PPoE service". I am having access to the satellite internet via PPoE with a username and a password.
I do not think it is a problem of auto-reconnect since the WiFi is not showing up the network if I do not manually press the back reset button so I believe it is a bug or something related to the router itself.
How to bypass this since it is causing a total blackout at my home and I lose connection to the security system....
Thanks and best regards


Hard Harry:
"after a power outage the router does not self reconnect "

What do you mean by a "power outage"? Do you mean the router loses power? Or do you mean your house loses power? If your modem loses power too, then it's normal that the router has to be power cycled (disconnect/reconnect power) to resync.

" since the WiFi is not showing up the network "

What if you just power cycle? Can you see the wifi networks then? Can you log into the router's 192.168.0.1 webpage when the problem happens? If not, I think it's possible your router was damaged by the power outage. If you have frequent power outages then I suggest you put your equipment on battery backup(UPS) . Not only will this protect you from surges, but will keep the equipment running so you "might" not have to powercycle. Then again if your entire area is down, then the satellite dish is probably losing power too.

zypa:
Power outage I am referring to a complete power loss on the entire house. After this happens (when I am at work for example) the router does not reboot correctly.  This means that it enters a "sleep mode" or something like this and someone has to physically reboot it from the back button.
If I do not push manually the button then I cannot access the router by WiFi or 192.168.0.1 It purely does not "restart", but stays in a limbo state. Power button led is green, internet globe is orange. However it is not reachable. Rather strange.

I could buy an ups but instead of paying 50$ on an UPS wouldn't it be better to change the router itself that has a value of 40 euro? That is what I am trying to avoid.
Can't I add it a rule that in case of a restart to do it twice by itself, thus eliminating the power loss issue?

Thanks again

Hard Harry:
"someone has to physically reboot it from the back button. "

Do you mean the power button or the reset button? Power button turns it off/on but the reset button resets it to factory settings.

What model modem do you have? Can you access that when the problem happens?

Also, when it happens next, try disconnecting all the ethernet connections from the router except the one you're testing from and try to access the router's IP then. I wonder if there could be a IP conflict between the modem(DSL gateway?) that is causing the problem on startup.

"I could buy an ups but instead of paying 50$ on an UPS wouldn't it be better to change the router itself that has a value of 40 euro"

Well first we have to see if this is normal behavior or not. When I lose power I also have to reboot my router. It doesn't have to do with the PPPoe, but the DHCP sync between the modem and the router's WAN connection. Has your setup ever worked in the way you wanted it to?

"Can't I add it a rule that in case of a restart to do it twice by itself, thus eliminating the power loss issue?"

The DHCP process can't be modified. It has to be universal so it works everywhere, so there is no way to modify in the router. Maybe you could create some kind of script to log into the router and force a reboot through UI, but you would still have to double click on the script, which is just as easy as pressing the power button the back. Also I think that solution would be a bit out of scope.

zypa:
You are correct, I was meaning to say "having to turn it on and off from the back button".

The signal comes from an antenna that runs down with a network cable. The cable then enters this small box that is not a modem but only amplifies the signal. Then from this small box another cable enters directly in the main port of this router.

I also believe there is a dhcp sync issue, but since i am having a random IP from the internet service provider i cannot force it manually.

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