Type one of these commands to quickly diagnose your configuration
“ipconfig” - shows what IP address your wireless & wired connection has
“ping 10.16.25.4” - pings your router or DS depending on what IP you type in
After you have done those, what does your ipconfig say for wireless & wired address ?
I believe the problem you are having is your router is configured for 5-GHz N settings. Most laptops don’t have a draft N compatible network card. So you need to configure it for both 2.4GHz and 5GHz operation. Also, known as G and N.
The setup guide for the control system says to disable 2.4 GHz connections. I would try connecting a patch cable directly between the laptop and the router (without the DS between them). This should be equivalent to what we did, which was to use my laptop (which does have a wireless N card) to connect directly to the router.
Since the router has DHCP active, set your labtop to acquire its IP automatically. Wire directly to the router. Do this after all of the FIRST instructions.
If you followed all of the other directions and you are the only computer attached to the router, you should be IP 10.xx.yy.10. Now connect the labtop to the ETH2 on the DS and ETH1 to the router. Everything should be golden from here.
I wish they would tell you to auto acquire in the instructions, but they don’t. I’ve configured 2 labtops this way and both do fine.
Doing this will work okay until you try to view Dashboard information. The robot will try to communicate with the device at 10.x.y.6 only, and if you haven’t set your computer to have that as a static IP address the Dashboard communication will fail.
DHCP will also not give you the expected results in a competition environment, as the field’s router does not know what team number your laptop is supposed to be associated with.
Is there a way to tell the Dashboard to send the data to another PC. It would be nice to have more than one Dashboard running during testing, with one group following the camera, and another monitoring the motors, sensors etc?