Belkin F5D7001 user manual Using a Hexadecimal Key

Models: F5D7001

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Using the Belkin Wireless LAN Utility

Most Wi-Fi products ship with security turned off. So once you have your network working, you need to activate WEP or WPA and make sure all your wireless devices are sharing the same network key.

The following diagram shows the effect of not having the correct network key throughout your network.

Network Key=

MyPassword

Wireless G Desktop

Network Card

Network Key=

Network Key=

MyPassword

MyPassword

Wireless G Router

Wireless G Notebook

Network Card

Network Key=

WRONG Password

Wireless G Desktop

Network Card

The Card cannot access the network because it uses a different network key than the one configured on the wireless router.

Using a Hexadecimal Key

A hexadecimal key is a mixture of numbers and letters from A–F and 0–9. 64-bit keys are five two-digit numbers. 128-bit keys are 13 two-digit numbers.

For instance:

AF 0F 4B C3 D4 = 64-bit key

C3 03 0F AF 0F 4B B2 C3 D4 4B C3 D4 E7 = 128-bit key

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Belkin F5D7001 user manual Using a Hexadecimal Key