2025-05-19, 19:12
Hello,
Another thing that comes to my mind is a problem resulting from the simultaneous use of static IP 192.168.1.253 while using a network of the same class, i.e. 192.168.1.x with a mask of /24. I suspect that for some reason cheaper routers allocate the MAC address of the device from the above static IP in the internal switch despite using DHCP, which causes the ping to return to the MAC/IP pair, in this case to IP 192.168.1.253. Try setting a static IP on your computer, i.e. 192.168.1.1, and connect the blitzordung to your PC back-to-back and check if you can connect to http://192.168.1.253 from a browser. If it works, you should probably reset the MAC/IP table in the router.
Another thing that comes to my mind is a problem resulting from the simultaneous use of static IP 192.168.1.253 while using a network of the same class, i.e. 192.168.1.x with a mask of /24. I suspect that for some reason cheaper routers allocate the MAC address of the device from the above static IP in the internal switch despite using DHCP, which causes the ping to return to the MAC/IP pair, in this case to IP 192.168.1.253. Try setting a static IP on your computer, i.e. 192.168.1.1, and connect the blitzordung to your PC back-to-back and check if you can connect to http://192.168.1.253 from a browser. If it works, you should probably reset the MAC/IP table in the router.