NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.

Forum Discussion

delk's avatar
delk
Aspirant
Dec 07, 2020
Solved

If my ORBI is an AP, where do the wired ports get their addresses?

I have an ORBI and a modem/router of different manufacture. ORBI is on subnet 10.0.0.1, and is 192.168.1.xxx on the router that feeds it. All of my devices are on the 10.0.0.x subnet, and everything ...
  • CrimpOn's avatar
    Dec 07, 2020

    delk wrote:

    I have an ORBI and a modem/router of different manufacture. ORBI is on subnet 10.0.0.1, and is 192.168.1.xxx on the router that feeds it. All of my devices are on the 10.0.0.x subnet, and everything works fine. If I change the ORBI to access point mode, I understand that WIFI devices will now be served a lease from the 192.168.1 subnet. What will be the IP range of the wired ports on the ORBI? I am trying to decide whether to switch to AP mode and let the home internet router control everything.

    Del


    IP addresses are assigned to devices, not ports. Thus every device attached to the Orbi in AP mode will receive IP addresses from the primary router, and will be in the 192.169.1.x subnet.  For example, there could be a switch connected to one of the Orbi ethernet jacks, and the switch might have more switches connected to its ports.  Every device connected to any of those switches and every device connected with WiFi will send out DHCP broadcasts asking for IP information and those will come from the base router.

     

    Is there a specific reason to change the Orbi to AP mode?  (Hint: this is one of the solutions for the "Double NAT" situation, which affects some specific applications, but not general usage.) https://kb.netgear.com/30186/What-is-Double-NAT