Forum Discussion
kamak
4 years agoAmbassador
Bridging customer owned routers to Telus router/equipment
With reference to this old thread from the Telus com forum: https://forum.telus.com/t5/Home/Bridge-Mode-Using-Your-Own-Router/ta-p/52181#:~:text=What%20Is%20Bridge%20Mode%3F,party%20router%20in%...
- 4 years ago
But does the NH20A have 2.5G LAN I/O? I don't think it does. In a modem AP config you connect the modem LAN to the AP's WAN? But I was always under the impression that you connected a gateway device to a AP via LAN to LAN. due to the fact that a gateway like the T3200M is a modem and a router, so router to router via LAN-LAN. That's the way I have my AX11000 connected to the T3200 at this moment, in AP mode and all seems well. I always had my WRT32X connected in AP mode to the T3200M, that way also.
kamak
4 years agoAmbassador
Thanks for the in-depth reply. But there are no WLAN "labeled" ports on the Nokia ONT, there are only "DATA1/2/3/4" I/O ports (I guess those are WLAN?), one of which feeds the T3200M's WLAN port. Can't we use more than one of these I/O from the ONT?
As for what I'm trying to ultimately do:
New Option #2: Two separate home LAN/Wi-Fi networks sharing the same WAN. Two Completely separated LANs
I'm trying to feed my TP-Link Archer AX11000 router a 2.5Gps ethernet connection straight from the G-240G-A ONT. then get a second TP-Link Archer AX11000 router on the opposite end of my property and feed it a 2.5Gps ethernet connection from the ONT. . The AX11000's only have one 2.5Gps WLAN, and 8x 1Gps LAN ports. I was told the Nokia G 240G A is capable of 2.5Gps or greater per port. from Telus tech support. So two MAC cloned AX11000 with two separated LAN/WiFi, with the same gateway address, sharing the same ISP WAN.
Nighthawk
Community Power User
4 years agoWAN is the connection from the T3200 out to the ONT. WLAN is Wireless Local Area Network, a.k.a. Wi-Fi. That comes from the T3200M. All the ONT does is convert fiber to copper and it only has gigabit ethernet ports on it so running anything faster to it (2.5G, 10G) would be a waste. Only ONE connection on the ONT is active. There is no way to get others active. You would need a switch. (Nokia G-240G-A spec sheet) The Nokia ONT is capable of a line rate of 2.5gbps coming into it, but the ethernet ports on it are only gigabit. Anyone with a fibre connection faster than 1Gbps would usually have a different ONT.
Keep in mind any device connected to the ONT directly through a switch, is a separate physical network. Home connections only allow for 2 WAN IP addresses so choose which two devices you want to work on that switch.
Again, do NOT clone any MAC addresses. It will cause endless problems for you. No matter what you do they cannot share the same network, gateway or WAN if you try connect them to the ONT through a switch. If you are set on using the pair of AX11000s, only ONE should be connected to the ONT. The second should be connected to the first. While the AX11000 doesn't have the specific ability to act as a wireless access point or extender, it may be possible to connect the two and share the same network and possibly the same wireless SSIDs. You would have to consult with TP Link on how to do that.
- kamak4 years agoAmbassador
"WAN is the connection from the T3200 out to the ONT. WLAN is Wireless Local Area Network, a.k.a. Wi-Fi." Understood.
"All the ONT does is convert fiber to copper and it only has gigabit ethernet ports on it so running anything faster to it (2.5G, 10G) would be a waste. Only ONE connection on the ONT is active."
So that's for sure, only one 1G eth port is active? And they are all 1G. Forget what the Telus Tech said. Got it.
So what I really need is, to be future proofed for 2.5G service, is a fiber connection straight to an ONT that has a 10G eth I/O, connect that to a 10G multi port switch, it could be as small as a 5 port I/O 10G switch. Then have two separate routed networks with WLAN Wi-Fi 6 and 2.5G LAN connections.
"Home connections only allow for 2 WAN IP addresses"
So you're saying Telus gives each customer "TWO" WAN IPs? for a single domestic service account? OR do you have to pay extra for this double WAN IP config?
- NFtoBC4 years ago
Community Power User
“So you're saying Telus gives each customer "TWO" WAN IPs? for a single domestic service account?”
Yes.