Macbook won't connect to WIFI network


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Hey,

My Macbook won't connect to the wireless network at home. I'm currently working from my Windows laptop which does not have any problems.

Upon connecting - giving WEP password - it always says "time-out..." on my Macbook. Just an hour ago everything worked fine.

Thanks,

W.

New problem: Post #9

Edited by Wannes
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Securing my router with WPA? Why?

I've been using my current WEP 128-bit + MAC filter setup for over a year now and never experienced any problems. I've not updated anything on my Macbook or router so nothing - even my position - has changed. It worked perfectly before.

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If you change the security configuration and it suddenly works, you'll have solved the problem and increased your WiFi security in one step.

If for some reason you don't feel like doing this (though I strongly advise you to) make sure there is no problem with the WiFi MAC address filtering.

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What is the wireless router you're using? Some are more finicky when connecting to Macs than others. You should at the very least try updating the router's firmware.

Also, on your Mac make sure you're specifying a ASCII password, or a Hex password, depending on what you set up on the router. e.g. what this guy was doing.

Also like noroom said, it may be a simple MAC filtering issue if you indeed enabled that on the router & never added your Macbook's MAC address to the list of allowed MAC addresses.

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I had major problems with wireless dropping off constantly about 2 weeks ago, then I realized it was the recent addition of some cordless phone handsets throughout the house. I changed my wireless channel from 11 to 6 and everything is fine. I have 3 Airport routers throughout the house, all interconnected via WDS, and they work great now.

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I've updated the firmware and changed the channel. Everything seems to work now. Lets hope for the best.

Thanks everyone for the advice. I'll look into the WPA2 security.

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Update:

My Macbook seems to connect and disconnect randomly depending on its own needs.

What I've tried so far:

  • Update firmware
  • Change channel
  • Disable MAC filter
  • Disable security
  • Disable both above
  • WPA security

None of these gave me the appropiate solution and I just couldn't reconnect to my network. I've downloaded iStumbler and it only shows my own network so there are no interferring channels nearby. However, when I'm standing next to my router (=15cm), iStumbler says my signal is 50%.

I'm using 10.5.x Leopard with all latest updates.

Help!

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Sorry for the continuous posts but since I can't edit my previous posts any more, I see no other solution. :blush:

I've just setup my router as WPA2 with a passphrase following this tutorial. I have the same router (Belkin) so following the steps was no bugger. Everything worked and I could connect to my router. However, the problem still consisted disallowing me to surf at acceptable speeds. My transmit rate is still somewhere between 1 and 6 and I only have 1 or 2 bars filled. Still, when standing next to my router, my maximum signal is 50%.

If my Airport card were to be fried I suppose I'd have no signal and no connection? Can I test my Airport card?

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My MacBook wifi connection drops off like a few times a day and gets annoying. I know it's not my network because this problem started to come up once i was updated to Snow Leopard.

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I've just shut down the various laptops in the living room, disconnected the chargers and disconnected my wireless mouse. By doing all that my transmit rate went from 1 to 6. My wireless home phone uses a different channel.

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  • 2 weeks later...

*blows dust of topic*

I've bought a LinkSys WUSB54GC, installed according the OSx86 guidelines (even though I'm on a genuine Mac) and now everything works. I've finally got internet working at a sufficient speed.

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