ColinTaylor
Part of the Furniture
The IP address assigned to you by your ISP's DHCP servers is based on your MAC address. So by changing your router's MAC address your ISP gave you a different IP address. That strongly suggests that the server you are trying to connect to had blacklisted the first IP address. So that would be an issue with the remote server's firewall configuration.I tried it by using the clone MAC address button in the WAN page and that did it for me.
So that means that the connection is blocked somewhere based on the MAC address.
Wouldn't that mean it's a problem with my modem or a router at my ISP in that case?