BrandonTech
Member
- Reaction score
- 10
- Location
- Alabama
Background: I work at a small school district. We probably have a little over 2000 users.
I came across this issue on two separate occasions, and I am hoping someone here can help me shed some light on it.
Scenario: Workstation (WS) has static IP address (static IP's do not reside in the DHCP scope). WS can no longer connect to the internet. I can ping devices on the local network just fine. I cannot ping any WAN addresses. Set the WS to DHCP, Internet connectivity returns. Set the WS IP address to any other availabe static IP, Internet connectivity returns. Set WS back to original static IP, Internet breaks again.
I've updated drivers, updated BIOS, tried different NICs, ipconfig commands, winsock command...
I should also add that if I take the "faulty" IP address and give it to a different WS, that WS also loses connectivity to the Internet. This makes me definitely think it is tied to the IP address in some way.
Anyone have any ideas, please?
I came across this issue on two separate occasions, and I am hoping someone here can help me shed some light on it.
Scenario: Workstation (WS) has static IP address (static IP's do not reside in the DHCP scope). WS can no longer connect to the internet. I can ping devices on the local network just fine. I cannot ping any WAN addresses. Set the WS to DHCP, Internet connectivity returns. Set the WS IP address to any other availabe static IP, Internet connectivity returns. Set WS back to original static IP, Internet breaks again.
I've updated drivers, updated BIOS, tried different NICs, ipconfig commands, winsock command...
I should also add that if I take the "faulty" IP address and give it to a different WS, that WS also loses connectivity to the Internet. This makes me definitely think it is tied to the IP address in some way.
Anyone have any ideas, please?