Thanks for trying to help. I was at the store this morning staring at Cisco/Linksys routers wondering if I should just bite the bullet, but I held out... barely.
How do you have your devices set up on the router?
Not sure what you mean by this. Everything is wired (including the laptop), nothing is connected wireless. As far as network diagram, the router is in my main distribution panel. The router is connected to multiple switches around my house. Both VPN devices are connected to the same switch in my home office.
Using any virtual server or QoS rules set up?
Nope, neither are setup.
Lets get some info going and go from there...
What ISP Service do you have? Cable or DSL?
What ISP Modem do you have? Stand Alone or built in router?
What ISP Modem make and model do you have?
If this modem has a built in router, it's best to bridge the modem. Having 2 routers on the same line can cause connection problems.
None of the above apply. It's a fiber link into the house. The fiber gateway is outside the house (and out of my control). I basically have a live CAT6 cable coming into my wall, and it is plugged straight into the router.
Ensure DNS IP addresses are being filled in under Setup/Internet/Manual?
Verified they were populated.
Turn off QoS options.
This was already off
Turn off Advanced DNS Services if you have this option.
This was enabled, I disabled it.
Turn on DNS Relay under Setup/Networking.
This was already enabled.
Setup DHCP reserved IP addresses for all devices on the router.
That was previously done.
Ensure devices are set to auto obtain an IP address.
Done.
What wireless modes are you using?
Try single mode G or mixed G and N?
What security mode are you using? WEP, WPA or WPA2? Preferred is WPA-Personal. Auto TPIK and AES.
None of the VPN devices are wireless. And during my office hours, no wireless devices are attached. However, just for reference, I am running mixed mode with WPA-Personal TPIK and AES. Also note that even if my laptop is connected wirelessly, it still has no problem establishing a VPN tunnel to my corporate VPN server.
Turn off all anti virus and firewall programs on PC while testing.
Turn off all devices accept for one wired PC while testing.
The single change I made above to disable Advanced DNS did not resolve the issue. So I can continue testing as per your above suggestions. But I don't see how these are relevant when the laptop can make a solid VPN tunnel. I'm just trying to prevent it from hijacking the tunnel previously established by the VPN phone.