Unable to connect to the internet after standby


  1. Posts : 83
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit
       #1

    Unable to connect to the internet after standby


    Hello

    I think this is a well known issue with Windows 7 and I think also Windows XP because I have the same problem with my old desktop PC which has Windows XP. As the title says I got some issues with both my laptop & desktop when coming from standby modus trying to connect to the internet. I'm lucky my laptop (and most other laptops) got a button to enable/disable the network card with a simple button on the keyboard or somewhere around there. But my PC hasn't got this button (just disconnect the cable from the USB adapter though). But still, my laptop & pc cannot seem to connect to the internet but they do can connect with the association point but the assocation point doesn't seem to be able to connect with the internet. Anybody else has this issue? I think it's a well known issue... It happens when I have put my laptop/desktop in standby and put it back on.
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 13,354
    Windows 7 Professional x64
       #2

    Hello,

    I have 2 suggestions.

    1) Update your network adapter drivers

    2) Go into Device Manager and select Properties for your adapter. Go to the Power tab, and make sure the computer cannot put the router to sleep.

    Hope this helps,
    ~Jonathan
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 83
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit
    Thread Starter
       #3

    Jonathan_King said:
    Hello,

    I have 2 suggestions.

    1) Update your network adapter drivers

    2) Go into Device Manager and select Properties for your adapter. Go to the Power tab, and make sure the computer cannot put the router to sleep.

    Hope this helps,
    ~Jonathan
    Hehe thanks for your quick reaction in first place, and yes indeed, the option to turn off the network card to save energy was enabled. I turned it off now so I will test it tonight (as I turn my laptop on standby mode when I go to bed).
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 13,354
    Windows 7 Professional x64
       #4

    fANAT1C said:
    Jonathan_King said:
    Hello,

    I have 2 suggestions.

    1) Update your network adapter drivers

    2) Go into Device Manager and select Properties for your adapter. Go to the Power tab, and make sure the computer cannot put the router to sleep.

    Hope this helps,
    ~Jonathan
    Hehe thanks for your quick reaction in first place, and yes indeed, the option to turn off the network card to save energy was enabled. I turned it off now so I will test it tonight (as I turn my laptop on standby mode when I go to bed).
    There is a 99% chance your problem is fixed. We will see tonight.
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 83
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit
    Thread Starter
       #5

    Jonathan_King said:
    fANAT1C said:
    Jonathan_King said:
    Hello,

    I have 2 suggestions.

    1) Update your network adapter drivers

    2) Go into Device Manager and select Properties for your adapter. Go to the Power tab, and make sure the computer cannot put the router to sleep.

    Hope this helps,
    ~Jonathan
    Hehe thanks for your quick reaction in first place, and yes indeed, the option to turn off the network card to save energy was enabled. I turned it off now so I will test it tonight (as I turn my laptop on standby mode when I go to bed).
    There is a 99% chance your problem is fixed. We will see tonight.
    Hope it will work ;-), it's not that annoying as I just need to click the network button 2 times and it's fixed.

    Thanks in advance
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 83
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit
    Thread Starter
       #6

    Your solution was correct, my internet did no longer disconnect so didn't gave any problems reconnecting as it was still connected when I woke up.

    Thanks alot, I love this forum!
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 1
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit
       #7

    A fix


    Signed up for this message board just to post this response, since this problem had me very frustrated yesterday and is now solved. I run Windows 7 Home Deluxe and have an on-board Realtek PCBe Family NIC and a Netgear WNR1000v3 router. They worked great up until about a week ago, when this weird no-internet-after-sleep problem reared it's weird head (no significant changes were made to the computer before the problem).

    So, when this problem popped up a few days ago, I simply avoided putting the machine to sleep for a while (temporary and non-ideal solution). I finally got a chance to mess with it yesterday to no avail. After much searching of the internet, the only informed suggested solutions to this specific issue advised 1) Unchecking "Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power" worked for me. Navigation: Network and sharing center -> Change Adapter Settings -> Local Area Connection -> Properties -> Configure -> Power Management; and 2) Reinstalling NIC drivers. After I completed these steps, nothing changed. I did some more digging and turned up some Microsoft support articles (not very helpful) about DHCP not querying the router correctly after sleep because the default Gateway address was lost. So, after waking the computer from sleep and having no internet, I checked out the internal IP address and it was set to some random value (when I checked, it wasn't even allocated on the internet). That was very strange indeed, so, today, I decided to go old-school, and my solution worked.
    Quick warning, this is only an appropriate solution if you are the router administrator (or can ask them to do this for you), otherwise, Step 1 is impossible.

    So, my reasoning was if DHCP doesn't work, instead of getting an internal IP address dynamically, I can set it to be a static IP. In order for this setup to persist working, you'll need to 1) force your router to give your computer the same IP every time, and 2) force windows to use a static IP and DNS server.

    Step 1: For the Netgear router, this is easy. Go to 192.168.1.1 in a web-browser and log into the router. Once there, click on the advanced settings tab and select internet setup, then select LAN setup (LAN setup or something like it will be in every router configuration menu, just click around). On this screen, you can reserve a specific IP (like 192.168.1.5 or whatever) for any device. Netgear makes this easy by just clicking the Add button at the bottom and using radio buttons to select from already connected wired devices. So, add your device and write down the IP address. Go back to the main router page and look for an info screen that lists the Subnet Mask, Gateway, and DNS server addresses for your router (they will be in xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx format); write them down too, you will all these values for Step 2.

    Step 2: In windows, go to Start --> Control Panel and select Network and Sharing Center, click on Local Area Connection (in blue) and then select Properties. You'll see several entries with values that can be changed. (Scroll down to) Click on Internet Protocol Version 4 and select Properties. Then select Use the Following IP address (radio button) and enter your computers static internal IP (from Step 1; usually something like 192.168.1.5). Then enter the subnet mask address from Step 1 (mine was 255.255.255.0, which is typical) and then the default gateway address from Step 1 (mine was 192.168.1.1, again typical). Now you need to fill in the DNS Server and Alternate DNS server addresses, which you also got from Step 1 (mine were 75.75.75.75 and 75.75.75.76). Tick the "Validate Settings Upon Exit" box and click OK.

    Step 3: Sit back and enjoy your internet. For me, the settings validation thing told me that there were still problems, yet everything works fine. I've put the computer to sleep several times with the same happy result, functional internet upon waking. It's been 36 hours now and everything works great.

    I hope this (fairly simple) fix works for you and saves you a day of frustration. (I actually use port-forwarding and already had an internal IP address reserved for my machine, so all I needed to do for Step 1 was figure out all the addresses needed for Step 2).
    Last edited by PsiDoc; 26 Oct 2015 at 11:02. Reason: Minor fixes
      My Computer


 

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