For wireless network users, Page 31, Page 33 – Brother MFC 8890DW User Manual

Page 30: Important

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30

For Wireless Network Users

18

Confirm your network environment (Infrastructure Mode)

The following instructions will offer two methods for installing your Brother machine in a wireless network
environment. Both methods are for infrastructure mode, using a wireless router or access point that uses DHCP
to assign IP addresses. Choose a configuration method and proceed to the page indicated.

a

If your wireless router/access point does not support SecureEasySetup™, Wi-Fi Protected Setup or
AOSS™, write down the wireless network settings of your wireless access point/router.

1

WPA/WPA2-PSK is a Wi-Fi Protected Access Pre-Shared Key, which lets the Brother wireless machine associate with access points using TKIP or
AES encryption (WPA-Personal). WPA/WPA2-PSK (TKIP or AES) uses a Pre-Shared Key (PSK) that is 8 or more characters in length, up to a
maximum of 63 characters.

2

The WEP key is for 64-bit encrypted networks or 128-bit encrypted networks and can contain both numbers and letters. If you do not know this

information you should see the documentation provided with your access point or wireless router. This key is a 64-bit or 128-bit value that must be
entered in an ASCII or HEXADECIMAL format.

Now go to

page 31

IMPORTANT

If you do not know this information (Network Name, WEP key, WPA2-PSK (Pre-Shared Key), LEAP or EAP-
FAST) you cannot continue the wireless setup. You should see the documentation provided with your
access point or wireless router, consult the router manufacturer, or your system administrator.

Item

Example

Record the current wireless network settings

Communication mode: (infrastructure)

Infrastructure

Network name: (SSID, ESSID)

HELLO

Authentication method:
(Open system, Shared key, WPA-PSK

1

,

WPA2-PSK

1

, LEAP, EAP-FAST)

WPA2-PSK

Encryption mode:
(None, WEP,TKIP, AES, CKIP)

AES

Network key:
(Encryption key , WEP key

2

, Passphrase)

12345678

For example:

64-bit ASCII:

Uses 5 text characters
e.g. “Hello” (this is case sensitive)

64-bit Hexadecimal:

Uses 10 digits of hexadecimal data
e.g. “71f2234aba”

128-bit ASCII:

Uses 13 text characters
e.g. “Wirelesscomms” (this is case sensitive)

128-bit Hexadecimal:

Uses 26 digits of hexadecimal data
e.g. “71f2234ab56cd709e5412aa3ba“

b

If your wireless router/access point supports automatic wireless (one-push) setup
(SecureEasySetup™, Wi-Fi Protected Setup or AOSS™)

Now go to

page 33

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