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Forum Discussion
tmalsburg
Nov 12, 2021Aspirant
Netgear R6120: Can set static IP
When I try to set a fixed IP (internet access), netmask, gateway, DNS on my brand new Netgear R6120 and then hit "test" or "apply", I get to a page that says Forbidden 403 on red background. Nothing ...
michaelkenward
Nov 13, 2021Guru - Experienced User
tmalsburg wrote:
When I try to set a fixed IP (internet access)
Is that a fixed WAN IP address?
I ask because "fixed" IP addresses come in many flavours. A fixed WAN IP is rare, but some ISPs do that.
I don't want to put you off, but don't expect too much of the R6120. For some strange reason, it is just about the last router that Netgear makes with 100 Mbps (100BASE-T) LAN and WAN ports. The manual actually says 10BASE-T, but the Data Sheet says 100.
tmalsburg
Nov 15, 2021Aspirant
michaelkenward wrote:Is that a fixed WAN IP address?
Yes! Should have been more precise.
I ask because "fixed" IP addresses come in many flavours. A fixed WAN IP is rare, but some ISPs do that.
I'm actually not connecting to an ISP but to another network at my workplace.
I don't want to put you off, but don't expect too much of the R6120. For some strange reason, it is just about the last router that Netgear makes with 100 Mbps (100BASE-T) LAN and WAN ports. The manual actually says 10BASE-T, but the Data Sheet says 100.
I'm not up-to-date on the current state of routers. Are you saying that the R6120 is slow? I think 100Mpbs will be enough for my purposes, but it's good to know that it could be a bottleneck.
Thanks for your response and have a good day!
- michaelkenwardNov 15, 2021Guru - Experienced User
tmalsburg wrote:
I'm not up-to-date on the current state of routers. Are you saying that the R6120 is slow? I think 100Mpbs will be enough for my purposes, but it's good to know that it could be a bottleneck.
Yes. Local traffic through the router will be limited to 100 Mbps. But that may be just fine for your purposes. I mentioned it because these days many people have an Internet connection that is faster than that. So if someone is paying for 200 Mbps, for example, they are throwing away money.
On the static IP – the term "fixed" might be more appropriate in some circumstances – are you connecting to another router on the network? If so the easiest option might be to put the R6120 into wireless access point mode. Then leave the main router to do all the work.
But that's just guesswork on my part based on knowing nothing about your workplace network. For stuff like that I'd talk to the people who run the network.
- tmalsburgNov 15, 2021Aspirant
> If so the easiest option might be to put the R6120 into wireless access point mode. Then leave the main router to do all the work.
I needed a private network because I have some devices that I don't want to expose to the wider network. Otherwise, yes, your proposed solution would have been preferrable. Thanks again!