Lost The Password? How To Reset Your Router
If you have lost or forgotten the User name and password, and cannot get in to your router’s control panel (or wireless access point) here are the steps you should follow to regain access, and control over your network settings.
1) If you do not know it already, determine the Make and Model of your router. This will often be found on a label on the bottom.
(“Make” is the manufacturer: Belkin, Netgear, Lynksys, D-link, for example; and the “model” will the “DIR 655”, or “WRT-54G” [your letters/numbers will vary].)
2) Use your favorite search engine and look up your router’s defaults – and write them down.
In the search pane, type the make, then the model, then “defaults” (D-link DIR 655 defaults, for example). From the list of results, look for the one that is the manufacturer’s Support page. Write down the:
- IP address (this will be something like “192.168.1.1”)
- Username
- Password
[note: if all you need is the User+Pwd, you can also go to http://www.routerpasswords.com/]
3) Open your web browser (Internet Explorer/Firefox/Chrome)
Type the default IP address you just looked up into the browser’s address bar (where the http://www.website.com goes) and press “Enter”.
This will open the router Control Panel login.
4) Try the default Username/Password (Often, this is “Admin” and the password is blank [empty].)
No luck?
5) Reset the router
IMPORTANT Note: resetting the router wipes away any changes you had made — and your connection settings to your ISP. You will have to create new user names and passwords and “wireless security keys” (WEP, WPA, WPA2) and reconnect to the Internet/ISP. (Which means you will have to reconnect each of your wireless devices by entering your new “key”.)
On the back of the router, look for a small button, or hole, labeled “Reset”.
• With the unit on, use a straightend paperclip to press the reset down for about 15 seconds, and then release it.
• The unit will restart on its own.
As soon as the lights stop blinking, the unit is ready.
Now repeat Steps 3 and 4, and this time you will be in, and you will have access to the router’s settings control panel.
Related:
- How to secure your wireless network
- How To Connect a Router Without the Setup CD
- Restricting Roommates Internet Use – Continued.
- A New Wireless Router “Internet security made me decide to buy a new router...”
Today’s quote: “Fall seven times, stand up eight.” ~ Japanese Proverb
Copyright 2007-2011 © “Tech Paul” (Paul Eckstrom). All Rights Reserved.
>> Folks, don’t miss an article! To get Tech – for Everyone articles delivered to your e-mail Inbox, click here, or to subscribe in your RSS reader, click here. <<
No comments yet.
Post your Comment/Question