Thanks for your response, Martyn
Turns out the problem was nothing to do with WinSCP.....
I discovered that the WinSCP 4.1.9 was using Active FTP, and didn't work with Passive.
The WSFTP Pro was also using Active FTP and did not work with Passive. I found this out by looking at the WS FTP Pro Log when making the connection. When you configure WS FTP Pro to use Passive, it will automatically try Active if it fails on Passive when making the connection, thus giving you a false sense of security.
The problem was actually the Port Range I had specified on the Windows IIS 6 Server to use for Passive FTP. There must have been a conflict or might have started too low, because when I changed the range to higher Port Numbers, I could use Passive FTP with the server.
Keith
Turns out the problem was nothing to do with WinSCP.....
I discovered that the WinSCP 4.1.9 was using Active FTP, and didn't work with Passive.
The WSFTP Pro was also using Active FTP and did not work with Passive. I found this out by looking at the WS FTP Pro Log when making the connection. When you configure WS FTP Pro to use Passive, it will automatically try Active if it fails on Passive when making the connection, thus giving you a false sense of security.
The problem was actually the Port Range I had specified on the Windows IIS 6 Server to use for Passive FTP. There must have been a conflict or might have started too low, because when I changed the range to higher Port Numbers, I could use Passive FTP with the server.
Keith