NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.
Forum Discussion
AtoTheN
Jul 04, 2019Aspirant
RBR50 - Static routes very slow transfers
I have an RBR50 (192.168.1.1) that has been working great overall. I have an Asus Router running DD-WRT that is cascaded using a LAN->WAN connection and lives at 10.0.1.1. I have a static route setup...
CrimpOn
Jul 04, 2019Guru - Experienced User
(I am probably too ignorant to offer advice.) What does "cascaded" mean? i.e. Can you give a more detailed description of exactly how this equipment is connected? The Orbi is connected to the internet modem? The WRT router is connected to one of the Orbi LAN ports?
- AtoTheNJul 04, 2019Aspirant
No problem! Cascaded means that you basically have one router plugged into another and each is managing their own LANs. There's an ethernet cable that runs from a LAN port on the Orbi router to the WAN port on a second router. The Orbi assigns an IP to the second router, serves internet to it, etc. By default, computers/devices on the Orbi LAN can't see anything inside the second LAN. By using the WAN port on the second router for the connection, that router is basically assuming that any traffic happening on the other side of that port is "outside" traffic and ignores it unless you have firewall or passthrough rules in place.
In my case, the Orbi LAN lives at 192.168.0.0 and the secondary LAN lives at 10.0.1.0. The static route tells any computers on 192.168.0.0 that have traffic destined for 10.0.1.0 to direct it to whatever the ip address is of the second router. That router catches that traffic, and if it's allowed through the firewall then it sends it to the appropriate destination on its own LAN.
With the issue I'm seeing, I don't recall it being so bad about a month or two ago when I set it up. There have been a couple of firmware updates in the meantime and I'm wondering if something came off the rails in a recent firmware. The way the transfer speeds of files "into" the second lan fluctuates is very odd and it's suspect that it's only happening in one direction and dependent on which side of the router the request is being made.
- FURRYe38Jul 04, 2019Guru - Experienced User
His in a double NAT condition is all.
What happens if you use the ASUS router in front of the Orbi router and configure static routers on the ASUS Router to the Orbi router?
You might try the ASUS router in AP mode and test this as well...
Not much user posts for static routes on Orbi...
- AtoTheNJul 08, 2019Aspirant
Thanks for the reply FURRYe38, you're right, not a whole lot of posts covering static routes and not really sure how to get more debugging information on the issue. I have a feeling that having the Asus router (or another more capable router) in front might be the solution. I'd like to keep the separation of LANs, so AP mode probably won't help. Was thinking about using VLANs, but the support for those seems a bit mixed on the Orbi and the implementaiton is geared more towards ISPs/modems that require VLANs. Ultimately, have the Orbi network be secondary to a main router is probably the right way to go.
- FURRYe38Jul 08, 2019Guru - Experienced User
There is debugging log captures under routerIPaddress/debug.htm should you want to send these to NG support for review.
Yes the VLAN is mainly for ISP support. If you wanted LAN side VLAN, a simple external managed network switch may offer best configuration for LAN side VLAN support.
Give the 2ndary network configuration a try and see how it goes. I've done this before and the only thing I notice is that I have to be specific about folder shares and inputting IP addresses to access them across two networks. It works, just a bit more typing is all.