Although I'm not sure if this will help. I have issues getting an IP on a certain network with Windows on a dual boot with Linux Debian laptop, Debian boots up fine with an IP address, not Windows. To get an IP in Windows, I reset the TCP/IP properties for the interface to not use DHCP and specify an address. Then I check the connection, usually it's good. Then I go back and re-set it to obtain it's address dynamically via DHCP, which it does even after a re-boot.
All the information you will require to specify your own address is in your post, such as the default gateway, subnet-mask, and the range of IP addresses to try, ex. (range 192.168.1.10 192.168.1.100), try 192.168.1.16, if that don't work because another computer uses that address, try something else in that range at random.
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