I think electical because the IP address shows all 0's even if the ethernet is hooked up
I got it off Ebay for dirt cheap and that's the only issue. Since mine is "slaved" to a fixed C-Band dish at 99W and lines from both motorized setups it does what I need it to do. Show HD & 4:2:2 feeds
ICE,
Your Ethernet is not hosed just because it shows all zeros for the IP/gateway/DNS etc. That just means that it has never been set up or the last owner erased all that data.
Connect it to your router and select DHCP/WIRED and then highlight SETUP and press OK. It should log itself in and fill in the blanks for you. Then REBOOT the box.
OR, select STATIC/WIRED and enter all the data manually - if you know what they all should be, then highlight SETUP and press OK. Then reboot the box.
If your router has been set up with encryption, your AZBox will tell you so and prompt you to enter the pass code for the type of encryption used. You should know that as it is the pass code that you set up yourself.
If you don't have WiFi capabilities, your menu scheme might appear differently than what I see, but the process should be the same overall.
Your data entries should look something like...
IP ADDRESS 192.168.1.102
SUBNET 255.255.255.0
GATEWAY 192.168.1.1
DNS1 XX.XXX.XXX.XXX
The DNS1 address will be that which your internet provider assigns to you or THEIR gateway for your account with them. That's the one that should remain PRIVATE.
The rest are LAN addressing and pretty much the same (generically speaking) for everyone's system.
The DNS2 address can just be ignored unless you subscribe to two different internet providers. The second one is like a back-up if you have one.
If the SETUP function returns a SUCCESSFUL result, then reboot and come back to this menu and run the speed check. If that is successful, then go to the LANGUAGE/TIME menu and select AUTO/SYNCHRONIZE as INTERNET and press OK. If the time (clock) results in a "TIME SYNCHRONIZED SUCCESSFULLY" message, then your ethernet connection is working and you are connected to the internet. You should probably be connected to your LAN as well, but there may be other parameters to test to ensure this. You might have a different firewall concern to deal with there.
RADAR