Can I get another network connection from my PC?

Can I get another network connection from my PC?

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BlueMR2

8,665 posts

203 months

Friday 10th May
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Silver Smudger said:
sunbeam alpine said:
This may be a stupid suggestion, but can't you connect the printer and the PC with a USB cable?

If you need to print from other computers on the network you can share it via the computer.
Silver Smudger said:
If I want the printer to be available on the network, then it must be wi-fi connected as it is now. It will not work on a USB cable. And it must be on the network for Instant Ink subscription and ordering to work.
ARHarh said:
Use the Wi-Fi on your pc to create a hotspot and connect the printer to the hotspot. If your pc does not have Wi-Fi buy a usb Wi-Fi dongle and use that.
USB was fine back before I signed up to Instant Ink - Since then, It is the only device in the house that cannot reliably talk to any of the 5 wifi sources I have around the building - The connectivity diagram above does not show the geographical layout - 2 of those wifi routers are within 10 feet of the printer

Often the printer would be visible on the network, and able to print from a laptop on wifi, but would insist that it could not see the internet, when everything else in the house was online!

I am fed up with troubleshooting such an antisocial machine.

Edited by Silver Smudger on Friday 10th May 09:50
Has it been given the ip address of the router so it knows how to get out to the internet?

Also having 2 wifi routers so close might not be helping.

Mr Pointy

11,320 posts

160 months

Friday 10th May
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Silver Smudger said:
Mr Pointy said:
What do you use your printer for? If you don't print photos then look at a Brother laser; you can get non-OEM toner cartridges which makes them quite cheap to run. You can get just a printer, or a printer with a scanner on top which can be useful but adds to the cost & size (note that laser printers are rather larger than inkjet if that's an issue).

https://www.printerland.co.uk/printers/brother/las...
Does not get a lot of use, and not doing photos - Laser printers look interesting, but seem a little pricy, but if it lasts then this could be worth it.
Does cheaper ink offset this initial cost? Have you had a long-lived dependable one?
If you don't print much then a 1000 page toner cartridge will last a long time, although you never actually get 1000 pages out of them, & you'll also never have the issue of the heads drying out like you do with inkjets. For me that was a big advantage.

The 8240CDW & 8260CDW both come with 1800/2600 page toners so not starter size, can do double sided printing, have network & wireless connectivity & the 8260 even has £50 cashback - but it is physically larger.

There are several posters on here who have Brother printers & as far as I know everyone is happy with them; I've had mine for about 18 months now & it just sits there & works.

Silver Smudger

Original Poster:

3,313 posts

168 months

Friday 10th May
quotequote all
Mr Pointy said:
If you don't print much then a 1000 page toner cartridge will last a long time, although you never actually get 1000 pages out of them, & you'll also never have the issue of the heads drying out like you do with inkjets. For me that was a big advantage.

The 8240CDW & 8260CDW both come with 1800/2600 page toners so not starter size, can do double sided printing, have network & wireless connectivity & the 8260 even has £50 cashback - but it is physically larger.

There are several posters on here who have Brother printers & as far as I know everyone is happy with them; I've had mine for about 18 months now & it just sits there & works.
Thank you - I will look into these.

Silver Smudger

Original Poster:

3,313 posts

168 months

Friday 10th May
quotequote all
BlueMR2 said:
Has it been given the ip address of the router so it knows how to get out to the internet?

Also having 2 wifi routers so close might not be helping.
All the wifi routers have individual names and log-ons and I have manually set channels so as to fill measured gaps and not overlap or be swamped by each other, or neighbour's transmissions.

The printer is six years old and can sit on any given wifi port for several months at a time, working quite happily (apart from ignoring paper inputs) and then all of a sudden I will recieve an email from HP that I have no internet - In spite of many other devices being continuously online - and I must re-connect and register my printer with the server.

This starts another round of uninstalling, reinstalling, updating drivers, switching it off for days etc, etc. Following the set-up process, it will contact the HP server and generate an ID/registration number, and then claim the internet is not on when I try to use this same number on the very next page.

Eventually it will suddenly recognise the router it was previously attached to and see the internet again and work for several more months without a glitch. I am certain this is an HP issue, and not an issue at my house.

Its days are numbered