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Forum Discussion
645Linden
Dec 30, 2023Aspirant
NETGEAR Nighthawk AX3600 (MK83) Tri-Band Mesh WiFi 6 system
I have an existing Cable/Modem/Wifi Router Arris SBG8300 and wanted to extend my existing WiFi coverage around my house. I installed a NETGEAR Nighthawk AX3600 (MK83) Tri-Band Mesh WiFi 6 system, on...
- Jan 02, 2024
So, I performed a hard-reset of my NETGEAR Nighthawk (MR80) and did minimal configuration before setting into Access Point mode. The network came back up all devices connected and worked fine. I then did a usual reboot of the Cable/Modem/Router and the NETGEAR MR80 & MS80, that I typically do every few months, just to keep them running clean. When I say "reboot", I mean I power down (unplug) the devices for a couple minutes. I then power the Cable/Modem/Router on for about 5 minutes to get it booted up and functioning, then I power on the NETGEAR MR80 for a couple minutes so its fully booted up and functioning, then power on the NETGEAR MS80. Again, all network devices connected and are A-O-K and no red LED status light on the MR80.
My guess as to why the NETGEAR MR80 acted unusual after I rebooted it the other day may have been due to me doing extra configuring of the WiFi & LAN settings before setting into Access Point mode, since a majority of the settings get greyed out once its in Access Point mode. This time I did minimal WiFi & LAN configuration in the MR80 before setting it into Access Point mode and didn't set a fixed IP address. It may also have been due to having, as you said, both the MR80 set with a fixed IP address and the Cablem/Modem/Router being set to assign a fixed IP address for the MR80 as well.
I'll consider the case closed.
Thanks for the assistance!
michaelkenward
Dec 30, 2023Guru - Experienced User
645Linden wrote:
My NETGEAR Access Point is configured with DHCP disabled and a static IP address of 192.168.0.2.
Talk of a "static IP address" is confusing. (It is sometimes used to describe the IP address that the ISP hands out.) What did you set and where?
If you mean "static route" then that isn't usually the way to manage an Access Point (AP).
In AP mode, the device gets its IP local address from the router.
If you want to find the IP address of an AP, the place to look is in the router's list of "attached devices".
If you want to tell your AP to use a particular IP address – to make it easy to find on your network, for example – then you use its controls to get a "fixed IP address". (The controls may warn you that this is "not recommended".) That is not the same as "static IP address" in the usual terminology.
If you do give the AP a fixed IP address, then it has to be one that the router can see and interpret.
So, back to the first question, how did you set the IP address for the AP?
By the way, if the idea is to be able to find the IP address of the AP, you could also look at Address Reservation on the router.
- 645LindenDec 30, 2023Aspirant
My NETGEAR Nighthawk access point is configured with a "fixed IP". I set this via "Advanced Setup"/"Wireless AP" where I selected "Enable fixed IP settings on this device (not recommended)". Just below this selection is where I entered the fixed IP address of 192.168.0.2.
I've tried to find the NETGEAR Nighthawk access point IP address, after I rebooted it, by way of looking inside my Arris Cable/Modem under connected devices, which shows all devices except my NETGEAR Nighthawk access point. I also tried to ping, arp -a and use an IP scanner to figure out what my access points IP address is, which no results.
- michaelkenwardDec 30, 2023Guru - Experienced User
645Linden wrote:
My NETGEAR Nighthawk access point is configured with a "fixed IP".
Thanks for clearing that up. Fixed is not static, which is what you originally wrote.
Have you tried leaving it "unfixed" and using a reserved address in your modem.router? Maybe it doesn't have that option.
Trying to troubleshoot the interaction between two devices isn't always easy. Might be worth looking at both sides. After all, in the MR80 is in AP mode, the main router is in charge.
- 645LindenDec 31, 2023Aspirant
Yes, "unfixing" the IP address is doable and most likely my next step. Although all of my 20 WiFi devices are connecting and functioning fine, it's just weird that I can't see, ping or browse into the MR80 Acccess Point after it rebooted and that it now has a red LED status light. My MS80 (Satellite) still has a blue LED status light and is connecting fine to the MR80 via WiFi. Anyway, I'll need to do a hard reset on the MR80, which will revert all settings back to factory configuration, which isn't a big deal, and I'll go ahead and configure the MR80 Access Point IP address to "Get dynamically from existing router" after I reset it tomorrow. With the "Get dynamically from existing router" configured, it's likely that my MR80 will keep its existing IP address if/when it reboots, but, if it did change, I should easily be able to find its IP address by viewing connected devices through the existing Cable/Modem/Router. After I reset the MR80, I'll let you know if my two anomalies go away, which are 1) not being able see or browse into the MR80 and 2) the single LED status light goes from red back to blue.
As for reserving an IP address in my existing Cable/Modem/Router, I did have the MR80 configured under "Connected Devices"/"Static Addresses" set with Host Name=MR80, IPv4 Address=192.168.0.2 & MAC Address=C8:9E:xx:xx:xx:xx. This configuration disappeared when I rebooted Cable/Modem/Router the other day.