M
Mike Monett
Here is a very basic but essential suggestion. I have been having
problems with a Speedstream 5360 modem from eBay. It was working
fine, then it locked up. The WAN led on the router went out,
indicating it had lost connection to the modem.
TekSavvy support said Bell Canada had lost three area codes in
Ontario. All the DSL modems gave timeout errors and nobody could
connect. My area code was among them. After the Bell problem was
fixed, I assumed that was the cause and continued on my merry way.
But the same wall plug also powered the UPS for my entire computer.
The UPS had a habit of sounding an alert from time to time. I
figured it was a power problem upstream since I live in a small town
far from the nuclear plants in Pickering.
Yesterday, I happened to have the main electrical panel removed to
add a new circuit. While moving the wires, the UPS gave another
alert.
You guessed it. The neutral (white) wire went under a clamp screw
that had never been tightened. The wire was just resting against the
metal.
Checking the other connections, I found several more that were never
properly tightened. Now the lights in the bathroom seem much
brighter, and they don't flicker any more.
So I had fooled myself into believing the random system problems
were somewhere else and out of my control. My guess is the
Speedstream modem got a bad glitch and hung. It is working fine now.
The Bell problem was just a coincidence, and had nothing to do with
the real problem. All this was very poor troubleshooting technique
on my part.
If you have nothing to do some day, and are familiar with working on
AC line voltages, you might check the connections in your panel and
see if any are loose. You might find some that were never tightened
properly and have worked loose over the years. The same applies to
wire nuts and the screw connections in wall sockets.
It only takes a couple of minutes to check, but it could save many
hours tracking down random system problems.
Best Regards,
Mike Monett
problems with a Speedstream 5360 modem from eBay. It was working
fine, then it locked up. The WAN led on the router went out,
indicating it had lost connection to the modem.
TekSavvy support said Bell Canada had lost three area codes in
Ontario. All the DSL modems gave timeout errors and nobody could
connect. My area code was among them. After the Bell problem was
fixed, I assumed that was the cause and continued on my merry way.
But the same wall plug also powered the UPS for my entire computer.
The UPS had a habit of sounding an alert from time to time. I
figured it was a power problem upstream since I live in a small town
far from the nuclear plants in Pickering.
Yesterday, I happened to have the main electrical panel removed to
add a new circuit. While moving the wires, the UPS gave another
alert.
You guessed it. The neutral (white) wire went under a clamp screw
that had never been tightened. The wire was just resting against the
metal.
Checking the other connections, I found several more that were never
properly tightened. Now the lights in the bathroom seem much
brighter, and they don't flicker any more.
So I had fooled myself into believing the random system problems
were somewhere else and out of my control. My guess is the
Speedstream modem got a bad glitch and hung. It is working fine now.
The Bell problem was just a coincidence, and had nothing to do with
the real problem. All this was very poor troubleshooting technique
on my part.
If you have nothing to do some day, and are familiar with working on
AC line voltages, you might check the connections in your panel and
see if any are loose. You might find some that were never tightened
properly and have worked loose over the years. The same applies to
wire nuts and the screw connections in wall sockets.
It only takes a couple of minutes to check, but it could save many
hours tracking down random system problems.
Best Regards,
Mike Monett