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Forum Discussion
tamefox
Feb 17, 2023Aspirant
AX series IP reservations
Looking to purchase a Netgear RAX120 / AX12 or similar in the UK. Can anyone please confirm : 1) Does this allow up to 64 reserved IP addresses in DHCP? 2) Do all AX series allow up to 64...
tamefox
Feb 17, 2023Aspirant
Yup, but thanks anyway.
All documentation is suitably vague and/or lacking in screenshots that give clues.....
michaelkenward
Feb 17, 2023Guru - Experienced User
Many of these things have nothing to do with the models involved. They are down to the standards the brands use for their devices. After all, they all work on the basis of a limited choice of chipsets.
Rather than chase model details, try something like this:
AX series IP reservations - Google Search
As this is a standards thing, you may have to ignore the "AX" bit. That relates to the WiFi. Your question may have more to do with the rest of the router.
- tamefoxFeb 19, 2023Aspirant
Thanks - had already tried that but may try again.
trouble is it turns up lots of forum crap from wishful thinkers, "I would image it's unlimited" etc.. ..really?At least Linksys answered directly, and although you can theoretically have 253, their firmware on all their models limits it to 50.
- Which should be enough.
However, their routers all require the IP reservations to be within the DHCP range - which is not what I want.
My current router limits IP reservations to c30, but anywhere in the 253 IP range, regardless of the DHCP range.
So, one manufacturer decides:
DHCP range applies to anything, reserved or not.
whilst another decides :
DCHP reservation range is for sundry IP requests, but reserved IP's can have anything in the 253 range.
This is good for structuring device types into groups, for easy recognition when troubleshooting, aided further by the ability to name as suits you.
These three simple things make it easy to manage a busy home network or small business without resorting to the unnecessary overhead of network management tools with groups/sites etc overheads....