|
02-11-2007, 18:26 | #1 |
Long Island Iced Tea
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Cranham, Upminster, Essex
Posts: 293
|
Wireless Routers.
Is it possible to have 2 wireless routers running? I've got this stupid BT Home hub in the bedroom with BT vision attached to it but my PC and xbox are in the front room.
I've still got my old wireless router, do you think I can just plug in the details to the old router and have that running too? |
02-11-2007, 18:40 | #2 |
A large glass of Merlot
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Letchworth with a Lightsaber
Posts: 5,819
|
Shouldn't be a problem.
We have a wired router upstairs running as a router and a wireless router downstairs acting as an access point. Will have to check with Paul, but I think you'll just need to turn off DHCP on the second router and set its address as a high number, eg: 192.168.0.254
__________________
Khef, Ka and Ka-Tet.... |
02-11-2007, 20:11 | #3 |
Screaming Orgasm
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Newbury
Posts: 15,194
|
Wired between the two or using them as a wireless bridge?
Wired will work fine. If the signal strength is very low at the second location you can use the same channel, otherwise keep the routers six channels apart. However, wireless bridging is a PITA. Most cheap routers don't support wireless bridging at all. Some Linksys routers can gain support with 3rd party firmware. You need either WDS or Client-Bridged mode support. You might be better off looking at powerline (Solwise or Netgear seem to work well) to do the bridging in this case, which will get you back to a wired-like configuration. Last edited by Mark; 02-11-2007 at 20:15. |
02-11-2007, 23:47 | #4 |
Long Island Iced Tea
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Cranham, Upminster, Essex
Posts: 293
|
Well I've got a phone line in the front room and one in the bed room. Can I just plug a second wireless router in and go from there or will BT kick up fuss?
|
02-11-2007, 23:52 | #5 |
Screaming Orgasm
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Newbury
Posts: 15,194
|
Well, you probably could, but you'd have to disconnect the BT Home Hub from the line first, which would be somewhat pointless.
|
02-11-2007, 23:53 | #6 |
Long Island Iced Tea
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Cranham, Upminster, Essex
Posts: 293
|
hmmm so can't have two routers on same line... guess I'll be getting the drill out this weekend then. Got 2 walls to get through :s
|
03-11-2007, 09:13 | #7 |
Moonshine
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Chelmsford, innit!
Posts: 3,979
|
You should be able to disable the router function on one of them? I'm running a dell and a netgear router on mine, the dell one is just an access point as I've switch the router bit off.
|
03-11-2007, 14:36 | #8 |
Absinthe
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Cambridge
Posts: 2,539
|
The only wireless kit that I've seen bridge well is the Buffalo routers. If BT will let you junk the homegateway then I'd recommend doing that though you can't do that if you have BT Vision as you need the homegateway for QOS.
|
03-11-2007, 16:35 | #9 |
Screaming Orgasm
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Newbury
Posts: 15,194
|
Anything should bridge well at the modem end. It's the other end that causes problems. I used my Draytek at the modem end and a Linksys WRT45GS with Sveasoft firmware at the client end. This worked very well for the connection but despite around 18 months of trying I couldn't get the connection stable beyond about 5Mbps. In the end I switched to Powerline to do the wireless part but I'm still using both the Draytek and the Linksys.
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|