<SNIP> So are you suggesting no default gateway AND nothing in the expert settings? Because that is essentially the situation. Traffic that hits the machine via the 192 network card just needs to return via the gateway for that card. Same for the 10 network. That's all. This computer isn't a router. It just stradles two networks. </SNIP> No, I'm saying that you need a default gateway that suits the needs of your clients and the server and this can be different for the clients and server, and different for the clients on each of the two networks. If clients on the 10. network need access to the 192. network then this machine is routing packets between the two networks. For clients on the 10. network set the default gateway to the IP address of the network card on the 10. network in the server. If the default gateway on the 192. network is a machine or device other than the server then you need to have both a default gateway and a route to the 10. network defined. But none of this is directly relevant to the server - as I said the default gateway defines how a machine will attempt to route packets for networks that it doesn't know anything about, a machine on the 192. network will send all non 192. network packets to the default gateway, unless it knows something better to do with them. The important thing about the server is to correctly configure it to route packets between the two networks that it is connected to - it is a router because it connects two different networks. On clients on the 192 network I think you will have to setup the dual homed server as the gateway, this way they will send all packets for any network other than the 192. network to this machine. This machine will then choose whether to send the packets to the 10. network card or on to the external gateway (if you have one). So if the gateway machine on the 192. network is 192.168.1.1 and the server nic on this network is 192.168.1.2 then set all clients to have default gateway 192.168.1.2, set the server to have default gateway = 192.168.1.1 If the 10. network nic on the server has the IP 10.0.0.1 then all clients on the 10 network should have default gateway = 10.0.0.1. If you don't have an external gateway then I don't think the server needs a default gateway, but attempts to access any network other than the 10. or 192. will probably fail. You then need to make sure that the server is set to forward packets between the networks. You may, also want to setup a firewall, but I would leave this until you have a working system. Damon