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Running OS X 10.5.8 on an old MacBook Pro on a wireless network. It might be relevant that I recently upgraded the wireless router and the DHCP-assigned IP addresses changed. Before that, everything worked reasonably well.

I can connect to the MBP from Windows 7 computers on the network, logging in with a user name and password, and access the files there as expected.

But the MBP disappears from Windows Explorer after a few minutes. I can usually add it back (always checking the box to remember it) but it just keeps disappearing. Sometimes when it disappears, I can't add it back and when I try, Windows Explorer says, "can't find."

How can I get this share to stick?

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I doubt Windows is forgetting the Mac, but losing the connection. I would think if the networking was there and its configuration on the Mac didn't change, it would connect using stored information. Once the connection is lost, it will not reconnect without refreshing (F5). (I've not got 7 but I don't think a lot has changed under the hood except for Aero.) Therefore, I'm going to target the Mac as nothing changed on Windows.

Sleep

Let's get this out of the way: I did not take this to be an issue with the Mac going to sleep but you might double check that's not the case. Having Filesharing on should prevent that automatically though it might be a bug if the Apple filesharing portion is off.

Hard IP

One simple solution is to create a new network location (Network>Location dropdown>Edit> + >«name it» then for the Airport section, create a manual IP address outside the range that the DHCP server within the router uses. Most routers addresses end in .1 and run their IP range starting at either 2 or 100 and go for 50 to 100 addresses. The wireless router's internal web pages will tell you what it's set up to use but you might be able to sleuth where the number starts based on what you see showing up automatically.

Try New Network Location

If you really think it's an issue related to the router change or every IP address is allocated to DHCP, you could nuke the config and start over. Create a new location as above but leave it with the defaults and see what that does. Doesn't matter what you name it while testing but if it does work, you'll want to delete the old Automatic location (presumed name) and rename the new location by double clicking on its name in the edit sheet.

Unknowns

Can you ping the Mac from Windows after the connection drops? What style of connection are you using, Map network drive with \\computername.local\share? Is there interference causing WiFi issues? Is the router faulty?

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  • Sleep: the Mac is definitely not going to sleep. Hard IP, New Network Location: I don't really think the DHCP is the cause of the problem. I haven't tried these experiments yet. Ping: I am not able to ping the Mac after the connection drops. The wifi and router seem to be working well in every other respect.
    – gauss256
    May 4, 2011 at 1:36
  • If ping doesn't respond, it's a fundamental problem— unless you have the firewall on the Mac set to stealth mode. If the WiFi signal where the Mac is located is weak, it could cause ghosting on the network. Considering that nothing but the router has changed presumably, it's either fixed above or radio interference. You should be running the current OS patch, of course.
    – Pecos Bill
    May 4, 2011 at 23:11

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