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Found on another site, hope it works.

  1. Go to control panel > Network and Internet > Network and Sharing Center

  2. In the section where it says “View your active networks” click on the house icon (this opens the “Set Network Properties” dialogue.

  3. Click on “Merge or delete network locations” (this displays all the networks you have connected to) You can select any that you don’t want and click Delete.

  4. There is also a merge option, you can select both of your home SSIDs and click merge.

    Note: If you don’t want to risk the merge option messing things up, you can delete the old SSID then in the “Set Network Properties” dialogue delete the 2 from the end of the current SSID.

Source(http://answers.groovypost.com/questions/2551/windows-7-has-put-a-2-at-the-end-of-my-ssid)

Found on another site, hope it works.

  1. Go to control panel > Network and Internet > Network and Sharing Center

  2. In the section where it says “View your active networks” click on the house icon (this opens the “Set Network Properties” dialogue.

  3. Click on “Merge or delete network locations” (this displays all the networks you have connected to) You can select any that you don’t want and click Delete.

  4. There is also a merge option, you can select both of your home SSIDs and click merge.

    Note: If you don’t want to risk the merge option messing things up, you can delete the old SSID then in the “Set Network Properties” dialogue delete the 2 from the end of the current SSID.

Found on another site, hope it works.

  1. Go to control panel > Network and Internet > Network and Sharing Center

  2. In the section where it says “View your active networks” click on the house icon (this opens the “Set Network Properties” dialogue.

  3. Click on “Merge or delete network locations” (this displays all the networks you have connected to) You can select any that you don’t want and click Delete.

  4. There is also a merge option, you can select both of your home SSIDs and click merge.

    Note: If you don’t want to risk the merge option messing things up, you can delete the old SSID then in the “Set Network Properties” dialogue delete the 2 from the end of the current SSID.

Source(http://answers.groovypost.com/questions/2551/windows-7-has-put-a-2-at-the-end-of-my-ssid)

Source Link
New-To-IT
  • 440
  • 1
  • 4
  • 12

Found on another site, hope it works.

  1. Go to control panel > Network and Internet > Network and Sharing Center

  2. In the section where it says “View your active networks” click on the house icon (this opens the “Set Network Properties” dialogue.

  3. Click on “Merge or delete network locations” (this displays all the networks you have connected to) You can select any that you don’t want and click Delete.

  4. There is also a merge option, you can select both of your home SSIDs and click merge.

    Note: If you don’t want to risk the merge option messing things up, you can delete the old SSID then in the “Set Network Properties” dialogue delete the 2 from the end of the current SSID.