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kamros77's avatar
kamros77
Aspirant
Mar 13, 2018
Solved

Printer Won't Connect to Network

     I am trying to install a printer on a new router (netgear 6400v2). the printer is the old Ricoh Aficio AP600N which has a network inside and is connected by wire to the router.     I turned off...
  • antinode's avatar
    Mar 13, 2018

    > I turned off the DHCP (rather left it as it was w/ the old router).

       You're talking here about the printer?

    > Copied the IP address from the setup menu and managed to print a
    > Configuration page which shows the MAC address as 00.00.74.7f.cc.04.

       Again, this is on the printer?

    > I have turned the DHCP off on the router [...]

       How, exactly?  Why?  I don't see why you would want to disable the
    router's DHCP server.

    > [...] and proceeded to the Reservation Table where I can add a new
    > device "manually" by entering its IP address, 192.168.1.55 [...]

       And that "192.168.1.55" is consistent with the router's LAN address?

    > [...] and the above MAC address and the name of the printer (simply
    > typed in). However, I keep getting the message "Invalid MAC Address"
    > from the router website.

       If you actually put in "00.00.74.7f.cc.04", then I'd try
    "00:00:74:7f:cc:04".

    > Any idea what's wrong? [...]

       I'm betting on punctuation.  But disabling the router's DHCP server
    may cause more trouble than a lost printer.

       If you manually configure the IP address (and subnet mask, and
    anything else, like a gateway address, et c.) on the printer, then the
    printer has a static address, and doesn't need a reserved (dynamic)
    address.  But other devices on your network might need dynamic
    addresses, so disabling the router's DHCP server can cause many
    problems.

       Reserved addresses are dynamic addresses, which are configured on the
    router, for use by its DHCP server.  If you configure a reserved address
    on the router for the printer, then you'd want the printer to be
    configured to use DHCP, and you'd need to have the router's DHCP server
    working.

       For the printer, you can use either a static address or a dynamic
    address.  I don't care.  And if you choose "dynamic", then you can make
    it a reserved (dynamic) address.  But dynamic addresses work only if the
    router's (or somebody's) DHCP server is working.  For many/most home
    networking environments, it's easier to use DHCP for everything, and
    configure reserved adddresses on the router for any devices whose
    address needs to be fixed/known.