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Forum Discussion
MC72
Nov 17, 2020Aspirant
R7000 goes straight to http://192.168.1.1/MNU_access_setRecovery_index.htm
Hi all - I stupidly upgraded my firmware using wifi instead of flashing it manually (which I'll do from now on!) since I rebooted post-upgrade, it lets me use my username/password for router security...
MC72
Nov 19, 2020Aspirant
antinode
Nov 19, 2020Guru
That looks like the same serial number as on the label.
> > [...] I have tried resetting many times to no avail, [...]
>
> "tried" _how_, exactly? Which kind of "no avail" is this? Did your
> "tried resetting" not cause the LEDs to flash as if something special
> was happening, or did an obviously effective settings reset not restore
> the default "admin" credentials, or what? If you did do a settings
> reset, are you now trying to use the _default_ credentials?
Still wondering.
- MC72Nov 20, 2020AspirantI followed the instructions in the manual and held the reset button for just over 10 seconds. No changes in the LED lights any of the times I tried it. Unplugged and tried again, tried while the power led was still amber and also waited until it turned white. It's still accepting default creds (admin / password) but persists in the serial number dead end I've described.
- MC72Nov 21, 2020Aspirant
Any ideas? I've answered all your questions to the best of my knowledge. Did I miss any?
I'm using the default creds which the router admin window accepts then it sends me to a page asking for the router serial, which I enter correctly and it gives an error message saying "162.168.1.1 says The serial number entered does not match the value on the router, try again" (sic). Are we stalemated here?
- antinodeNov 21, 2020Guru
> [...] held the reset button for just over 10 seconds. No changes in
> the LED lights any of the times I tried it. [...]Not a good sign. You might try again, but with no connections to the
R7000 other than its power adapter. If the Reset button does not cause
a reset (evidenced by LED activity), causing the R7000 to accept its
default "admin" credentials, then there's a bigger-than-usual problem.
The fact that it doesn't like the serial number from the label also
suggests some kind of hardware problem or firmware corruption.> [...] It's still accepting default creds (admin / password) but
> persists in the serial number dead end I've described.That's what I'd expect _rejecting_ the credentials to look like. The
serial-number request is part of the (often defective) password-recovery
scheme. If you put in any bad set of credentials, does it do anything
different?
If you can't get it to do a proper settings reset, then you might try
to find a way to entice it into letting the TFTP recovery scheme cram a
fresh firmware image into it. That might require some lucky timing, or
unusual power-on/Reset sequencing. No bets on whether it's possible,
but you might have little to lose by playing around with it.- MC72Nov 22, 2020AspirantAll is well - I used a USB-TTL cable and putty to put it into recovery mode and then was able to flash a new firmware image through Ethernet cable through TFTP.
Running great now :)
Thanks for the advice!