It is used to get an IP address. Once the router has an error, all connected devices, including your receivers, will also have an error.
Kevin
Kevin
This sounds like my problem but I don't understand everything you said. What is HIC? My Hopper is connected to my broadband through wireless. The Joeys are connected to the hopper using MOCA over my home coax and don't show any other connection in their setup screens. All are in the same subnet however, as if the Hopper is bridging the Joeys onto my home network?gtal98 said:I'm assuming you're H/J are connected with a HIC - this makes them run the MOCA IP scheme with your routers DHCP configuration. If you were to disconnect the HIC and connect the Hopper with a direct ethernet cable or wifi this would prevent the Joeys from crashing due to a invalid IP everytime your router does, since they would effectively be two separate networks then.
Your Hopper will bridge the MOCA Network (Joey's) to the Hopper's Internet connection. One Internet connection will feed the entire Hopper/Joey environment."Xyzzy.dude" said:This sounds like my problem but I don't understand everything you said. What is HIC? My Hopper is connected to my broadband through wireless. The Joeys are connected to the hopper using MOCA over my home coax and don't show any other connection in their setup screens. All are in the same subnet however, as if the Hopper is bridging the Joeys onto my home network?
Check if bridging is enabled on the Hopper:depoteet said:I do not have a HIC. I have a wired internet connection to my Hopper. I do not have access to Home Media on my Joeys. Originally I understood that I would need an HIC or internet connections directly to the Hopper and the Joeys if I wanted to get internet services on the Joeys.
My installer said I didn't need either, only a connection at the Hopper, as a software change would allow the Joeys to use that connection.
I would like to access Home Media from my Joeys. What do I need?
Thanks