Have you tried doing a factory reset?
Otherwise it sounds like its bricked to me.
I assume you tried a grand reset. Also try holding the reset button
down while turning on the router. Adding a few 4 letter incantations
may also help.
I have a DI-624, which methinks is a rev C1, sitting on a hilltop with
an endless flashing status light. Obviously, this is not proper
operation, but everything works, so why bother fixing it? Anyway,
I've seen the DI-624 (various revs) do strange things. Most were
fixed by reloading or updating the firmware. Most did NOT stay fixed
and were eventually converted to eWaste. Personally, I think there's
an internal routine that tramples bits and pieces of the flash ram
until things stop working and it's time to buy a replacement.
If you want to spend an inordinate amount of time on the problem, be
advised that the DI-624 sorta supports TFPT firmware updates:
<http://forum.openwrt.org/viewtopic.php?id=10855>
If it's still mostly alive, you might give that a try.
There's also a hack to flash the DI-624 firmware onto a DI-524. While
that's not directly applicable, reverse engineering the procedure
might be useful for flashing your DI-624 using TFTP.
<http://www.dslreports.com/forum/remark,15034139>
--
Jeff Liebermann je...@cruzio.com
150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558
I had a DLink AP do exactly that after a power flick during a storm.
The WLAN LEDs (802.11a/bg) (and power, IIRC) stopped illuminating, but
everything else was still lit. Reset didn't work on it either.
I thought it was toast, but was able to fix it. The firmware simply
became corrupted during the power flicker. When I hooked it up to a
computer directly, it gave me a page saying that firmware was
corrupted and an option to update the firmware.
Are you setting up a static IP on your laptop before you connect it?
Set up something like IP 192.168.0.100 , Subnet mask 255.255.255.0 ,
and then try connecting to it at 192.168.0.1
If it is just corrupted firmware, you should get a page saying that
the firmware is corrupted and also a means to upload new firmware from
your laptop.
Try connecting the laptop to both the WAN and one (all, if need be)
LAN ports. I forget which I had to use. (I think it was actually one
of the LAN ports that I did have success with.)
If that doesn't work, then it is probably toast...
>how do I grand reset? Is that when I plug it in with the reset
>pressed?
To just clear the settings, press and hold the reset button (hole in
back of unit) for:
10 seconds: according to DLink
<http://support.dlink.com/faq/view.asp?prod_id=976>
<http://www.dslreports.com/faq/12903>
20 seconds: according to what I've seen
Do *NOT* unplug the power after punching the reset button. Give it
time to scribble all over the NVRAM settings area. My guess is about
15 seconds, but give it at least 1-2 minutes. Pull the plug too soon
and you'll have trash for default values.
However, methinks you need a new firmware load, which requires a
different reset procedure. See:
<http://www.dslreports.com/forum/remark,15166425>
Note that IE is required.
>how do I grand reset? Is that when I plug it in with the reset
>pressed?
Some are different, but figure you need to unplug or disconnect the
power, then press and hold down the reset button for 10 to ? seconds.
--
Find and mayhaps repair a stuck pixel
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> how do I grand reset? Is that when I plug it in with the reset
> pressed?
Well first off its gonna *cost* you...
Like a thousand dollars :(
--
"Those who can make you believe absurdities,
can make you commit atrocities" - Voltaire
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