3Com (R) Corporation EtherDisk (R) Diskette for The EtherLink 10 ISA NIC Family Troubleshooting If the NIC diagnostic tests fail, the NIC might not be defective. Check the following: 1. Make sure that the NIC is completely seated in its slot. Review the installation instructions in the appropriate NIC guide. 2. If you are running the Group 2 test using the DOS based diagnostic, make sure that the NIC is securely connected to a loopback plug or to a properly cabled coax network. 3. If you are running the Group 3 test using the DOS based diagnostic or the network test using the Windows installer or diagnotic, make sure that the NIC is securely connected to a properly cabled network and an echo server is set up on the network. 4. If you are configuring the I/O base address, interrupt request level, or boot PROM base address, make sure that the settings you choose for these parameters do not conflict with any other peripheral or software program installed in the computer. For a list of system resources commonly used by other peripherals, select "Commonly used interrupt and I/O base addresses" from the "Configuration and Diagnostic" submenu. 5. Make sure that the configuration setting for the transceiver type is correct. 6. Running Group 2 tests in the DOS based diagnostic while connected to an active network can cause intermittent failures. These failures can be avoided by using a loopback plug or by connecting to an inactive network on which only the computer being tested is operating. 7. If you installed a twisted-pair NIC, check the LED on the backplate of the adapter. The LED should be checked only during or after the diagnostic tests have been run. The LED will be on when there is a proper connection between the NIC and the hub. The LED will flash if the polarity of the connection is reversed. 8. The slot in the computer may be defective. Install the NIC in another slot and run the tests again. 9. The computer in which the NIC is installed might be defective. Install the NIC in a known functioning computer and run the tests again. 10. The loopback plug you are using might be defective. Try a different loopback plug. 11. Replace the failed NIC with a known working NIC, with the same configuration. If the second NIC fails, something is probably wrong with the computer, not with the NIC. (%VER TROUBLE.TXT - Troubleshooting tips v6.1a)