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Forum Discussion
hafizullah
Sep 18, 2019Aspirant
Password recovery does not work
R6300V2 with next-to-latest firmware. Came home to find I had no Internet access. Could not get into the router GUI, so tried hard reset. Router GUI came up in Set Password Recovery mode, so gave ...
- Sep 19, 2019
hafizullah wrote:
As I said: I have done a factory reset several times. To be clear: Holding the Reset button while powering-up, until the Power light begins to blink.
I have no idea where you got that from. It is not the recognised factory reset.
To do that you press the "button" while the power is on.
How do I perform a factory reset on my NETGEAR router? | Answer | NETGEAR Support
There is a more severe reset, but it is more complicated than your procedure.
- Press reset for 30 seconds
- Keep pressing reset while removing power
- Keep pressing reset for another 30 seconds while apply power
Then there is the question about the rest of your network. As you have been told, the IP address you see for the computer, 10.0.0.100, suggests that you have a second router on your network. The computer is getting its address from something else. Not your R6300v2.
What modem do you have?
antinode
Sep 19, 2019Guru
> R6300V2 [...]
Connected to what?
> [...] with next-to-latest firmware.
An actual firmware version number might be more useful than that
description.
> [...] Could not get into the router GUI, [...]
"Could not"? What happened when you tried?
> [...] tried hard reset. [...]
How, exactly? Did the LED indicators do interesting things when you
did whatever you did?
> Tried resetting by holding the Reset button while powering-up. [...]
"holding" for how long? What does the User Manual suggest? Seven
seconds? Longer?
> [...] Router GUI [...]
Accessed how, exactly? "routerlogin" name? IP address?
> [...] came up in Set Password Recovery mode, [...]
If you really had reset the router, then I would not expect that.
> [...] The router gives me legit IP addresses of 193.168.1.1 for the
> router and 192.168.1.2 for my computer - reset from 10.0.0.1 for the
> router and 10.0.0.100 for the computer, but I still can't get into the
> GUI or past the password-recovery prompt. [...]
Are you trying to say that your computer formerly had a "10.0.0.x"
address, but now has a "192.168.x" address? "10.0.0.x" suggests the
presence of another router. Are you sure that you're talking to the
right one?
> Tried using antinode's nifty nte.exe to telnet in (which worked
> before), but that fails.
You need the right password for that, too.
- hafizullahSep 19, 2019Aspirant
<<
Connected to what?
>>
Laptop computer running Windows 7 via an ethernet cable to LAN port 1.
<<An actual firmware version number might be more useful than that
description.>>
I believe it's 1.0.4.32_10.0.92, since that's the latest I've downloaded.
<<
>>> [...] tried hard reset. [...]
How, exactly? Did the LED indicators do interesting things when you
did whatever you did?<<
Power the router off and disconnect the power cord. Wait 5 minutes. Depress the Reset switch with paper clip and re-insert power cord. Press Power button. The LEDs light up, then go dark. I wait for three cycles of this, then un-press the Reset switch and let it boot up normally.[...] Could not get into the router GUI, [...]
"Could not"? What happened when you tried?
>>
1. ipconfig says I'm at 192.168.1.2 and the router is at 192.168.1.1; I launch IE or Chrome and enter 192.168.1.1 to the addressbar.
2. I'm asked for a login, suggesting "admin" and a string of asterisks in the password field. I try a login name of "admin" and "password" for the password field.
3. The dialogbox flashes and presents the login & password field again. I try "admin" and "password," and it presents me with the password-recovery screen asking for the router's serial #.
4. I enter the serial # from the bottom of the router, then it goes to the password hint questions that I'd entered the first time I did a full reset (as above).
5. I enter the answers and it displays the login "admin" and the password I'd set the first time. I copy that to the clipboard (and just to test, paste to a text editor. It's correct).
6. I press the "login" button and it offers "admin" as the login name and a string of asterisks for the password. I tab to the Password field and paste my password.
7. I press the Sign In button and the dialog flashes, repeating the prompt for "admin" as the login name and a string of asterisks as the password. I repeat step 6 and it takes me to the Password Recovery prompt.
<<> [...] came up in Set Password Recovery mode, [...]
If you really had reset the router, then I would not expect that.
>>
Me neither. That's why I'm here asking for help.
<<> [...] The router gives me legit IP addresses of 193.168.1.1 for the
> router and 192.168.1.2 for my computer - reset from 10.0.0.1 for the
> router and 10.0.0.100 for the computer, but I still can't get into the
> GUI or past the password-recovery prompt. [...]Are you trying to say that your computer formerly had a "10.0.0.x"
address, but now has a "192.168.x" address? "10.0.0.x" suggests the
presence of another router. Are you sure that you're talking to the
right one?>>
I am trying to say that I originally set up the gateway addy to 10.0.0.1 and the LAN addressblock to 10.0.0.100–10.0.0.110. So the reset put the router back to the default private addressblock, but did not reset the login and password. And no, there's no other router. The laptop and router are sitting on my dining-room table, connected via ethernet cable.