I still havent tested the device from the WAN-side. The packet does not crash the router if it is addressed to the router. To the crash the router (from the LAN-side, anyway), it must be addressed to an external (WAN-side) IP address. example: router is 192.168.1.1 evil_pc is 192.168.1.101 (evil_pc is a PC attached to one of the ethernet ports on the router.) evil_pc sends the magic packet to ANY external IP address, for example, www.google.com. The router will then crash, and need to be rebooted. magic packet: No. Time Source Destination Protocol Info 11576 989.558120 192.168.1.101 67.8.x.x IP Unknown (0xaa) Frame 11576 (58 bytes on wire, 58 bytes captured) Ethernet II, Src: 3com_cc:57:86 (00:10:5a:cc:57:86), Dst: Cisco-Li_99:a1:49 (00:0f:66:99:a1:49) Destination: Cisco-Li_99:a1:49 (00:0f:66:99:a1:49) Source: 3com_cc:57:86 (00:10:5a:cc:57:86) Type: IP (0x0800) Internet Protocol, Src: 192.168.1.101 (192.168.1.101), Dst: 67.8.x.x (67.8.x.x) Version: 4 Header length: 24 bytes Differentiated Services Field: 0x00 (DSCP 0x00: Default; ECN: 0x00) Total Length: 44 Identification: 0x04d2 (1234) Flags: 0x00 Fragment offset: 0 Time to live: 255 Protocol: Unknown (0xaa) Header checksum: 0x062a [correct] Source: 192.168.1.101 (192.168.1.101) Destination: 67.8.x.x (67.8.x.x) Options: (4 bytes) Unknown (0xe4) (with too-short option length = 0 bytes) Data (20 bytes) 0000 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 4a 4b 4c 4d 4e 4f 50 ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOP 0010 52 53 54 55 RSTU