DaveGoTech
Programmer
Hi
I have a friend who called me in desperation. They have a new home (about 3 years old). At that time they also purchased 2 new Dell desktop computers. The first PC is on the second floor and wired directly into a wireless router (g) and a cable modem - no problem. The second PC is located on the first floor on the other side of the house, therefore, wireless was the only sensible option. Since day one, there have been connectivity problems to the internet on this wireless PC. Over the years, they have had several computer companies out who replaced the router and or wireless PCI card in the machine. It worked for a little while, but the problems return. I went over last week and checked things out. I could not get the PC to connect reliably with the router, even when I moved it to a closer location. So I brought it home and set it up on my wirelss connection and could not connect either. So I replaced the PCI card (a no name imported cheapie) with a new Netgear PCI card. After loading and configuring the software, it ran great. I let it run overnight, then brought it back to the owner. It would now connect, but drift in and out of connectivity, rendering it pretty much useless. Today, I returned with my laptop which has a Netgear PCMCIA wireless card. It connect fine at any location in the house. The signal strength is also higher (80-90%) compared to the desktop PC which only has 25-35% strength.
Question 1. I was under the impression that the PC should have a higher signal strength due to the external antenna.
Question 2. Any ideas on what could be causing the desktop PC to receive a weak signal? Noise in the PC? I do notice that the Dell PC has 4 PCI slots, of which all are occupied. It has a video card, modem, sound card and the wireless card. Do certain Dells have a design issue when running wireless cards? It does not look like a software problem with Windows XP or the netgear wireless software. Any other ideas???
I have a friend who called me in desperation. They have a new home (about 3 years old). At that time they also purchased 2 new Dell desktop computers. The first PC is on the second floor and wired directly into a wireless router (g) and a cable modem - no problem. The second PC is located on the first floor on the other side of the house, therefore, wireless was the only sensible option. Since day one, there have been connectivity problems to the internet on this wireless PC. Over the years, they have had several computer companies out who replaced the router and or wireless PCI card in the machine. It worked for a little while, but the problems return. I went over last week and checked things out. I could not get the PC to connect reliably with the router, even when I moved it to a closer location. So I brought it home and set it up on my wirelss connection and could not connect either. So I replaced the PCI card (a no name imported cheapie) with a new Netgear PCI card. After loading and configuring the software, it ran great. I let it run overnight, then brought it back to the owner. It would now connect, but drift in and out of connectivity, rendering it pretty much useless. Today, I returned with my laptop which has a Netgear PCMCIA wireless card. It connect fine at any location in the house. The signal strength is also higher (80-90%) compared to the desktop PC which only has 25-35% strength.
Question 1. I was under the impression that the PC should have a higher signal strength due to the external antenna.
Question 2. Any ideas on what could be causing the desktop PC to receive a weak signal? Noise in the PC? I do notice that the Dell PC has 4 PCI slots, of which all are occupied. It has a video card, modem, sound card and the wireless card. Do certain Dells have a design issue when running wireless cards? It does not look like a software problem with Windows XP or the netgear wireless software. Any other ideas???