Forum Discussion
bskitmor
2 years agoAdvisor
TP-Link Deco AX3000 WiFi 6 Mesh System
Thinking of replacing my existing T3200M router plus 3 Arcadyan extenders with a TP-Link Mesh system. My wifi network has been showing some flakiness of late and I'm thinking it's time to move on. ...
- 2 years agoYes, should be a straight swap. I recommend duplicating the same SSID and password with the new router so you don't need to reconfigure any of your devices.
xray
2 years agoHero
Any device connected to the LAN side any router won't be able to ping the WAN IP of said router. That's how network routing is supposed to behave.
It just occurred to me that if the T3200M is in bridge mode the Ubiquity should not be getting 192.168.1.1 as the WAN IP. It should be getting a public IP. Are you sure the Ubiquity is configured to use DHCP?
It just occurred to me that if the T3200M is in bridge mode the Ubiquity should not be getting 192.168.1.1 as the WAN IP. It should be getting a public IP. Are you sure the Ubiquity is configured to use DHCP?
bskitmor
2 years agoAdvisor
Good question -- I didn't even get as far as configuring the Ubiquiti because I couldn't get a required Internet connection to run the setup utility. And, you are quite right I should have received an Ip address other than 192.168.1.1 -- it's kind of like a catch 22. Maybe it's possible to do some offline config work on the Ubiquiti and check that it's DHCP capable. Something else I did today was to connect the NOKIA Opt ethernet "out" directly to the Ubiquiti WAN port (after recycling the OPT) -- no difference, same inability to get into the Ubiquiti setup process and in this case no DHCP dimension (presumably). I am getting terminally impatient -- can't understand how Ubiquiti gets such great press (e.g. Garmin) and an almost evangelical following.
Thanks for your help
- bskitmor2 years agoAdvisor
Indeed!! I spent many hours in my career struggling with what software was supposed to do "out of the box" --- thought things might have improved. The Ubiquiti ecosystem seems to be really sweet once you start to get the glimmer.
- xray2 years agoHeroProgress! Strange that it wouldn't ship with working software.
- bskitmor2 years agoAdvisor
Finally got the Ubiquiti UDR connected to my home network using 3200m bridging after installing the UDR software offline using a connected laptop. Eureka!
- bskitmor2 years agoAdvisor
Here is a posting that I just made on the Ubiquiti community site:
Hi Again Travis -- I did finally get around to plugging a wired laptop into Port 1 (bridged) of the Actiontec 3200M and this is what ipconfig showed:
Connection-specific DNS Suffix . :
Link-local IPv6 Address . . . . . : fe80::6f64:dbd1:d302:4c1c%56
IPv4 Address. . . . . . . . . . . : 23.16.98.114
Subnet Mask . . . . . . . . . . . : 255.255.252.0
Default Gateway . . . . . . . . . : 23.16.96.1
So looks like it is getting a public IP so maybe this confirms that the 3200M is in bridged mode. I am beginning to suspect that the UDR that was shipped to me is NFG -- having done more surfing it looks like a ton of folks out there have had the same problem. I have opened a ticket with Ubiquiti: not holding my breath!
- bskitmor2 years agoAdvisor
Hi Again -- yes I did a hard reset before every attempt to connect, agree DHCP has to be in the default config. Terminally baffled -- the unit just does not seem to want to connect. I have a ticket open with the Ubiquiti folks so we'll see what advice they have.
- xray2 years agoHero
Did you try a hard reset on the Ubiquity? I would think the default config is to use DHCP
And you are welcome. It's easy helping people who are willing to do the work to help themselves.
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