You should then be able to use that computer to connect to your miner boxes and give them new ip addresses on the 10.0.0.x network. Set a static IP on any computer to an address on the 192.168.1.x network (obviously a different address to the miner boxes). Your other option, of course, is to give up changing the router and just the change the IP addresses of your miners. Put both on the 192.168.1.x network and see if those settings stick. Most routers will update their DHCP ranges automatically, but conceivably it's trying to apply your settings but refusing when the IP address is on a different subnet to the DHCP range. So you've already tried changing the IP address on router but it doesn't seem to save? Is that right? It's worth trying to change the DHCP range as well as the IP address of the router and then saving it in one go. I need to change the router IP, but it won't seem to save the new IP I put in. If you're not sure how to manually set an IP address, just google it with your operating system and you should get a bunch of simple how-to articles. so make sure whatever their IP addresses are is OUTSIDE the DHCP range you set on your router. But I'm guessing your mining boxes have static IPs. If it's running DHCP you also might also need to manually change the IP address range. You'll need to change it's internal IP address. Then you should be able to log in to the router. IP: 10.0.0.11 (in fact, any of the last three digits can be any numbers between 2 & 254 and it will work). If all your computers are still on the 192.168.1.x network, then you'll need to manually set a static IP before you can access the router. Have you logged in to your router to change the settings? There's instructions here:
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