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.
Nighthawk
Community Power User
4 years agoWhat is your ultimate end goal with all of this? Better wifi reception? Trying to run a server of some kind? It would help to know so that a more applicable answer could be provided.
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The only way for the existing T3200 WLAN and LAN ports to be shared with a customer device, "all on one network" as you mentioned, is if that device is simply a wireless access point and NOT a router. The recently released Telus Wifi6 boost unit does just that. You'll still end up with a second SSID but it will directly let your devices (PC, phone, tablet, etc) to connect to the T3200 LAN and DHCP. No IP conflicts as the Boost will just grab an IP from the T3200 automatically, as will any device connected to it.
I've honestly never bridged my T3200M when I had my own router connected previously. I didn't disable the wifi on the T3200 either. All I had to do was make sure my router's IP range/subnet was different than the 192.168.1.x range the T3200 defaults to. If they share the same IP pool there will be endless conflicts. They were completely separate networks but since the T3200M wasn't bridged I could still access devices on that network by directly using the IP of the device. EDIT: If you clones the MAC address of the T3200, that would also just cause you more headaches. The two devices can NOT share the same gateway address, IP address, MAC address, or anything else.
When bridged the T3200 and the customer device are supposed to have different a gateway address. I've never bridged mine so I can't say for certain what the result will be.
The Nokia ONT only has a SINGLE WAN port that is active. As a result, If you really want two completely separate networks, install a gigabit switch between the ONT and the T3200. Then connect your own router to another port on that gigabit switch and it should pull a completely separate WAN IP address than the T3200. Depending on how your house is wired and where the devices are that you want to connect to each network, this may not be a feasible option.
Also if the two devices are on separate networks, there is no such thing as bridging them together. You may be misunderstanding what bridging port 1 does on the T3200. Most third party routers aren't even capable of "bridging" or even acting merely as a wireless access point.
kamak
4 years agoAmbassador
"EDIT: If you clones the MAC address of the T3200, that would also just cause you more headaches. The two devices can NOT share the same gateway address, IP address, MAC address, or anything else."
My initial thought was that if the two routers shared the same EDIT:LAN IP address, had the same MAC address, and all the LAN IPs from the two MAC identical routers, behind the gateway, were unique, then THEY would be seen as one device, fetch a single WAN IP address, as just one device with a single public address. Like the way a switch would be seen, with two routers behind it, attached.