Hello All,

I am wondering if thsi setup is possible on a Windows 200 SP4
Machine. I would like to use a Dual Network Card setup such that one
netwkr card is sued to connected to the domain at my office and the
second card can be used to assign a static IP address and connect my
PC to a PLC Controller. I can do this using a single card, but it
involves me disconnecting from the Work network, and over-writing the
TCP/IP settings on the nwetork card.

I need NIC1 to use a DHCP Assigned IP Address, and NIC2 to use the
static 192.168.1.250. NIC2 would only be communicating with a PLC
using a PLC Design/Programming application.

Any ideas would be apprecated.

-Dave

Re: Double Network Cards by Phillip

Phillip
Mon Mar 31 09:53:09 PDT 2008

As long as they are not the same subnet it will probably be fine.

Make sure the second nic does not get placed first in the binding
order,...Net'Places-->Advanced-->Advanced Settings-->Upper box.

Make sure the second nic does *not* get a Default Gateway. It should get
an IP# and mask only.

--
Phillip Windell
www.wandtv.com

The views expressed, are my own and not those of my employer, or Microsoft,
or anyone else associated with me, including my cats.
-----------------------------------------------------

<silvz7105@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:794ef392-4784-40a6-811b-a5a62ecf628b@d45g2000hsc.googlegroups.com...
> Hello All,
>
> I am wondering if thsi setup is possible on a Windows 200 SP4
> Machine. I would like to use a Dual Network Card setup such that one
> netwkr card is sued to connected to the domain at my office and the
> second card can be used to assign a static IP address and connect my
> PC to a PLC Controller. I can do this using a single card, but it
> involves me disconnecting from the Work network, and over-writing the
> TCP/IP settings on the nwetork card.
>
> I need NIC1 to use a DHCP Assigned IP Address, and NIC2 to use the
> static 192.168.1.250. NIC2 would only be communicating with a PLC
> using a PLC Design/Programming application.
>
> Any ideas would be apprecated.
>
> -Dave



Re: Double Network Cards by silvz7105

silvz7105
Mon Mar 31 11:40:39 PDT 2008

Tried that. The NIC2 was set above NIC1 in bindings, changed it such
that NIC1 is at the top.

Still not able to get dedicated communication to the PLC. Im thinking
it might be something in the Designer Program that is limiting me.

Time for a tech support call.

On Mar 31, 12:53=A0pm, "Phillip Windell" <philwind...@hotmail.com>
wrote:
> As long as they are not the same subnet it will probably be fine.
>
> Make sure the second nic does not get placed first in the binding
> order,...Net'Places-->Advanced-->Advanced Settings-->Upper box.
>
> Make sure the second nic does *not* get a Default Gateway. =A0 It should g=
et
> an IP# and mask only.
>
> --
> Phillip Windellwww.wandtv.com
>
> The views expressed, are my own and not those of my employer, or Microsoft=
,
> or anyone else associated with me, including my cats.
> -----------------------------------------------------
>
> <silvz7...@gmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:794ef392-4784-40a6-811b-a5a62ecf628b@d45g2000hsc.googlegroups.com...
>
> > Hello All,
>
> > I am wondering if thsi setup is possible on a Windows 200 SP4
> > Machine. =A0I would like to use a Dual Network Card setup such that one
> > netwkr card is sued to connected to the domain at my office and the
> > second card can be used to assign a static IP address and connect my
> > PC to a PLC Controller. =A0I can do this using a single card, but it
> > involves me disconnecting from the Work network, and over-writing the
> > TCP/IP settings on the nwetork card.
>
> > I need NIC1 to use a DHCP Assigned IP Address, and NIC2 to use the
> > static 192.168.1.250. =A0NIC2 would only be communicating with a PLC
> > using a PLC Design/Programming application.
>
> > Any ideas would be apprecated.
>
> > -Dave