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Forum Discussion
beachmat
Apr 29, 2022Guide
LB2120 failover
I was looking at the LB2120 as a possible 4g failover option for our wired internet connection. Am I right in thinking that in order for that feature to work with an existing router, that router must...
beachmat
Apr 29, 2022Guide
Thanks - I've seen that, but it just says to connect the modem to an ethernet port on the router. In that case, if the main connection goes down, how will the router know to send internet-bound traffic through the LB2120? I'm not clear.
plemans
Apr 29, 2022Guru - Experienced User
From my reading you'd be going :
Modem---->lb2120 wan port-----lan port---->router (in either ap mode or the router's ip address in the lb2120's dmz).
By default the lb2120 should just use the modem (hardline) as the data and failover to the mobile connection if the hardline goes down.
Its if you start making changes that it forces either hardlined or data only.
The lb2120 would be acting as in the dual wan (hardline or mobile) capacity and feeding your router (if you had a connected one)
- beachmatApr 29, 2022Guide
Yes, I understand that the LB2120 has failover enabled by default, and needs a wireline modem connected on the WAN port for that. What I don't quite get is its relationship to an existing router. The manual says you need to set the LB2120 to bridge mode so it isn't routing (fine), but then says to connect its LAN port to "an ethernet port on the router". Presumably they mean the WAN port? So that the LB2120 is sitting between the router and the wireline connection, as you say feeding the router, and not actually doing anything if the wired internet is working? If they mean to connect the LB2120 to a LAN port on the router, I don't get it.
- plemansApr 29, 2022Guru - Experienced User
The lb2120 is effectively just passing data through it if you're going modem----lb2120-----router (its wan port).
If it senses the modem data link fail, it takes over (failover) for supplying your router with data.
That's usually how it works
- beachmatApr 29, 2022Guide
Got it, thanks. The manual could have been a little clearer.