Try assigning a fixed range that's within the range of addresses assigned by your DHCP server that doesn't conflict with existing addresses.

For example, let's say your DHCP server serves up IPs in the range of:

192.168.0.2
through
192.168.0.254
with a subnet mask of
255.255.255.0
and the PCs on your LAN are falling into line like this:
192.168.0.2
192.168.0.3
192.168.0.4
(...)

Then tell the AR manager to assign:

192.168.0.250 through
192.168.0.254
with a subnet mask of
255.255.255.0

See if that works.

Note: I'm assuming you're 100 percent ethernet, right? Not HPNA?


_________
Tony Fabris
_________________________
Tony Fabris