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wesfrink's avatar
wesfrink
Aspirant
May 28, 2018

Nighthawk LTE on AT&T

New here, well very new just found this place. I use my Nighthwak for home internet and have a couple burning questions and cannnot find someone at AT&T knowledgable to ask.

 

1. Does the Ethernet port work on AT&T to feed a switch and then have it feed a wireless access point? Anything special one would need to know?

 

2. External Antennas I have 0 clue trying to figure out what I need and how much better signal strength (currently 2 bars) will give me. I logged into the desktop view of the router and tried to ask AT&T about some of the values I saw there and they had no clue what anything meant. 

 

HELP!!!!!!!

12 Replies

  • 1) Yes, you can do that, but suggest turn off the WiFi in the Nighthawk itself.

     

    2) I live in a remote area and I get nothing on my Nighthawk M1 without an external antenna. I have tried two: 1) The Proxicast 4G/LTE cross polarized panel antenna and later 2) a pair of Proxicast 9/11 dBi Ultra broadband antennas arranged in a cross polarized mounting.

     

    I mounted them on a 10' mast from the high point on my house and ran 15' Low loss 50 ohm coax extension cables with SMA female to TS-9 pigtails to connect to the Nighthawk. Where I am, no perceptable improvement in performance from case 1 to case 2.

    • wesfrink's avatar
      wesfrink
      Aspirant
      With the antennas what kind of service? Who's your provider AT&T as well?
      • wesfrink's avatar
        wesfrink
        Aspirant
        Also I assume you were logged into the router from. Webpage while aiming? What number or numbers am I needing to watch and what is a good or decent strength? I really do not know how much gain I need. I get 1-2 bars on the internal antennas.
    • winger13's avatar
      winger13
      Guide

       


      eLuddite wrote:

      1) Yes, you can do that, but suggest turn off the WiFi in the Nighthawk itself.

       ... .


      I have seen this suggestion early on in other posts, but it was never clear to me why turning off the M1 Nighthawk's WIFI is suggested when plugging it's ethernet port into a another WIFI router's WAN/Internet (input) port.  Can you explain the reasoning?

       

      The way I have tried hooking this up on my end, my M1 Nighthawk's WIFI IP range is 192.168.2.20 - 192.168.2.99  and  the WIFI router it is connected to has a WIFI IP range of 192.168.0.20 - 192.168.0.99.  Based on this, there is no WIFI IP conflict.  It is unclear why else we should consider turning off the M1 Nighthawk's WIFI.

       

      • eLuddite's avatar
        eLuddite
        Aspirant

        In my mind, when you connect the Nighthawk M1 by its ethernet port to the WAN of another WiFi router, you are using the M1 as your Internet source (exactly like a DSL or Cable modem) and then connecting your devices to the WiFi router which creates your LAN, with some clients perhaps hard wired to ethernet ports and others via WiFi. 

         

        If you leave the WiFi on the Nighthawk M1 enabled, even using the SSID (wifi network name) as your existing WiFi router, then devices connecting to the M1 will be on a different network (192.168.2.0) than devices connected to your second WiFi router (192.168.0.0) and will not have access to any network resources on your second (existing) LAN (192.168.0.0). If there are no such resources that you care about, then leave the M1's WiFi enabled and it will provide you with just Internet access.

         

        Regardless, your second WiFi router will also complain about double NAT unless you configure it to ignore double NAT.