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Forum Discussion
wildpete
Dec 02, 2019Aspirant
Adding Orbi RBK53 to home office
I am brand new to Orbi, and not a technical wizard by any means. I have recently moved my business into a home office and have 4 Mac computers and a Xerox laser printer networked via a Linksys 16-por...
- Dec 02, 2019
wildpete wrote:I am feeling a bit less overwhelmed now. Thank you for this information. And I really appreciate the plain talk. Is putting the rented modem into "bridge" mode something I can do or does the ISP have to do it?
Got me there. My guess is you need to call their support line and say, "I got a new WiFi system and they tell me that the Comtrend has to be put into 'bridge or passthrough mode'. Can you do that for me, or can I do it myself?" If they cannot do it or tell you how to, then you put the Orbi into AP mode and get on with life.
I had a service call from Spectrum several months ago and I said to the tech, "Hey. I have no use for the router and WiFi since I have my own. Can you just install a 'plain modem'", and he said, "sure. no problem."
wildpete
Dec 02, 2019Aspirant
The rented modem is Comtrend NexusLink 3120. I have not connected the Orbi yet as I didn't want to cause a big mess.
CrimpOn
Dec 02, 2019Guru - Experienced User
Thanks for the photo. The Comtrend is a combination modem/router/WiFi. As FURRYe38 described you have two easy choices:
- Turn off the WiFi on the Comtrend.
Install the Orbi router in the office as an Access Point (AP).
Place the Orbi satellite in the house where it gets a decent signal from the router and use the satellite to provide WiFi to the house.
In this case, it does not matter if the switch is between the Comtrend and the Orbi or connected to the Orbi.
Since this requires no interaction with the internet provider and only one change to the Comtrend (turning off WiFi), this is the easiest.
or.... - Place the Comtrend in "bridge" or "passthrough" mode so that it is "only a modem". Not a router. No WiFi.
The Orbi needs to be connected directly to the Comtrend, with the switch connected to one of the Orbi LAN ports.
Because this requires changing the fundamental mode of the Comtrend, this is more work.
Part of the decision is whether you want the Comtrend or the Orbi to be "your router". Do you want/need VPN to the office from elsewhere? Does the Comtrend provide VPN? The Orbi does, but it has to be a router to do so.
Good Luck
- wildpeteDec 02, 2019Aspirant
I am feeling a bit less overwhelmed now. Thank you for this information. And I really appreciate the plain talk. Is putting the rented modem into "bridge" mode something I can do or does the ISP have to do it?
- CrimpOnDec 02, 2019Guru - Experienced User
wildpete wrote:I am feeling a bit less overwhelmed now. Thank you for this information. And I really appreciate the plain talk. Is putting the rented modem into "bridge" mode something I can do or does the ISP have to do it?
Got me there. My guess is you need to call their support line and say, "I got a new WiFi system and they tell me that the Comtrend has to be put into 'bridge or passthrough mode'. Can you do that for me, or can I do it myself?" If they cannot do it or tell you how to, then you put the Orbi into AP mode and get on with life.
I had a service call from Spectrum several months ago and I said to the tech, "Hey. I have no use for the router and WiFi since I have my own. Can you just install a 'plain modem'", and he said, "sure. no problem."