NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.
Forum Discussion
Tdeck
May 16, 2024Follower
My R6400v2 network name changed after trying to install a wifi printer.
I tried to install my new Et-2850 wireless printer. It wouldn't connect. Nighthawk then showed no devices connected and had a different Wifi Network Name (SSID) name from the name on my I-phones. T...
- May 16, 2024
Tdeck wrote:
The I-phones matched the network name of the modem but one letter of the network in my Nighthawk name was different. I changed the name to match the name on my I-phones and modem and changed the connection on my devices by changing the name and re-entering the password.
It sounds like you changed the SSID of the wifi from the R6400v2. Is that what you mean by network name?
You should set the SSID name on the router and get the wifi devices to connect to that. Changing it to match a wifi devices has a knock-on effect for everything else. You will end up chasing all over the place trying to keep your devices up to date with one another.
I tried to install my new Et-2850 wireless printer. It wouldn't connect.
The usual way to fix wifi printers is to find the printer maker's utility, the software that runs on your operating system. Then use that to connect the printer to the wifi.
The router just broadcasts wifi. It is then down to the printer to play ball. There isn't much that you can do on a router, beyond fixing it to a particular IP address, that affects what the printer gets up to.
Where possible, using the WPS feature can simplify things.
michaelkenward
May 16, 2024Guru - Experienced User
Tdeck wrote:
The I-phones matched the network name of the modem but one letter of the network in my Nighthawk name was different. I changed the name to match the name on my I-phones and modem and changed the connection on my devices by changing the name and re-entering the password.
It sounds like you changed the SSID of the wifi from the R6400v2. Is that what you mean by network name?
You should set the SSID name on the router and get the wifi devices to connect to that. Changing it to match a wifi devices has a knock-on effect for everything else. You will end up chasing all over the place trying to keep your devices up to date with one another.
I tried to install my new Et-2850 wireless printer. It wouldn't connect.
The usual way to fix wifi printers is to find the printer maker's utility, the software that runs on your operating system. Then use that to connect the printer to the wifi.
The router just broadcasts wifi. It is then down to the printer to play ball. There isn't much that you can do on a router, beyond fixing it to a particular IP address, that affects what the printer gets up to.
Where possible, using the WPS feature can simplify things.