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Forum Discussion
buckleyje5
Feb 02, 2018Tutor
Orbi AC3000 drops internet EVERY NIGHT
First off, we have the Netgear Nighthawk Docsis 3.0 Cable Modem Router (with the WIFI disabled) running a wired connection to our Orbi- and we have 2 sattelites. Every Single Night the wifi drop...
Roamabout
Feb 08, 2018Luminary
What if you run the Orbi router in AP mode and give it a static address. Does that change the behavior ?
buckleyje5
Feb 08, 2018Tutor
I did try the AP mode, and we didn't have any drops for several days.....BUT for some reason it made our Ring doorbell have a 10-second lag. So I switched it back.
I don't know enough about networking to understand static IP, but when I read the log at the time internet disconnects, there's always a DHCP IP entry- so I thought about disabling the DHCP and moving to static IP, but does that mean I have to manually assign an IP to every device in our house? Or will it keep the ones it has? And what happens if a device leaves our house- will it reconnect when it comes back?
This is above my paygrade :)
- RoamaboutFeb 08, 2018Luminary
The typical home router is assuming that everything (other than the router) is getting a dynamic address assigned by DHCP. You can usually configure the router to only assign DHCP addresses from a range, say 192.168.1.2 to 192.168.1.100. Now you can allocate a static address above 192.168.1.100 to any device. Everything else will stay on DHCP.
With the Orbi in AP mode and a static IP address that would take DHCP out of the picture.
- t_kFeb 08, 2018Luminary
buckleyje5 - I have a theory on your problem based on my experience.
I suspect that circa 9:30pm there is just more traffic going over the Orbi's around that time. Perhaps devices are scheduled to perform backups and sync right around then. That shouldn't cause your Orbi's to fail, of course, but it makes it more likely due to bugs.
After a year+ of working against the Orbi's, I know for certain that the backhaul (WDS system) is very unreliable and will cut out or fail in different ways under any kind of sustained traffic. Note, that these are layer 2 issues - not IP level, which can make them confusing. Since the issues are layer 2 related, if your doorbell is attached to a satellite, it also explains the delay you're seeing there.