> The routing table has no fixed routes.
Yes, but what routes do you have?
A duff routing table is usually the cause of this sort of behaviour, IME.
> ? (192.168.0.254) t 00:0F:B5:A2:14:C8 [ether] on ether1
> www.routerlogin.com (192.168.1.1) at 00:18:4D:0C:81:A4 [ether] on eth0
> ? (192.168.1.2) at 00:0F:B5:A2:14:C9 [ether] on eth0
So you're using both 192.168.0.0/24 and 192.168.0.1.0/24 networks, on two
network interfaces (one of which has a rather strange name). That's an
easy way to stuff your routing table if you're not careful.
So what is your current routing table?
Vic.