- Joined
- Apr 19, 2007
- Messages
- 8,706
- Reaction score
- 7,171
- Points
- 393
- Location
- USA
- Printer Model
- Canon MB5120, Pencil
Wireless printer setup has become beyond my pay grade. I'm starting to think the wireless radio has malfunctioned.
Helping a friend with their Canon MX860. The printer has been functioning appropriately as a wireless printer using an ATT U-Verse wireless router (Model 5268AC FXN) as its access point until 3 days ago. The printer was not hard wired to anything (except power). The ATT U-Verse wireless router is part of a package that includes Direct TV satellite television.
Internet and TV all work fine and I can see the SSID's of wireless devices with my Kindle, including the wireless router, but NOT the SSID of the printer. Looking at the WLAN settings it shows the WLAN is INACTIVE and I cannot turn WLAN on using the LCD control panel on the printer. Not good.
I have uninstalled and re-installed the software numerous times using the most current drivers and utilities (Win 8.1 x64 versions). These were the ones installed previously, so I know they did work. The firewall is not blocking the install. The notebook OS is Windows Home 10 x64.
The Canon IJ Network Tool does list several broadcasting SSID's, what it considers "access points", but the ATT U-Verse wireless router's SSID is NOT listed. I have tried manually setting the access point in the IJ Network tool but it does not make any difference.
The IJ Network Tool shows the LAN port setting for the printer is USB0001 (IIRC) but does show an error about the port setting, IIRC, is "There are ports that cannot be used with their current settings."
The printer will print if plugged into the USB port on the notebook. The notebook is the only device used for printing.
If I cannot make "ACTIVE" the WLAN radio on the printer then it seems to be game over for wireless printer function. I have suggested workarounds such as plugging the printer into the ethernet port on the wireless router or using a wireless print server but these were not suitable compromises. Bringing the notebook to the printer to plug it in to the printer is a temporary solution. A new printer is more to their liking.
Any suggestions?
Helping a friend with their Canon MX860. The printer has been functioning appropriately as a wireless printer using an ATT U-Verse wireless router (Model 5268AC FXN) as its access point until 3 days ago. The printer was not hard wired to anything (except power). The ATT U-Verse wireless router is part of a package that includes Direct TV satellite television.
Internet and TV all work fine and I can see the SSID's of wireless devices with my Kindle, including the wireless router, but NOT the SSID of the printer. Looking at the WLAN settings it shows the WLAN is INACTIVE and I cannot turn WLAN on using the LCD control panel on the printer. Not good.
I have uninstalled and re-installed the software numerous times using the most current drivers and utilities (Win 8.1 x64 versions). These were the ones installed previously, so I know they did work. The firewall is not blocking the install. The notebook OS is Windows Home 10 x64.
The Canon IJ Network Tool does list several broadcasting SSID's, what it considers "access points", but the ATT U-Verse wireless router's SSID is NOT listed. I have tried manually setting the access point in the IJ Network tool but it does not make any difference.
The IJ Network Tool shows the LAN port setting for the printer is USB0001 (IIRC) but does show an error about the port setting, IIRC, is "There are ports that cannot be used with their current settings."
The printer will print if plugged into the USB port on the notebook. The notebook is the only device used for printing.
If I cannot make "ACTIVE" the WLAN radio on the printer then it seems to be game over for wireless printer function. I have suggested workarounds such as plugging the printer into the ethernet port on the wireless router or using a wireless print server but these were not suitable compromises. Bringing the notebook to the printer to plug it in to the printer is a temporary solution. A new printer is more to their liking.
Any suggestions?