NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.
Forum Discussion
freeassociates
May 04, 2023Aspirant
Set up AC1750 Smart WiFi Router as print server
I know it's overkill. But I just installed an ASUS Mesh WiFi system and now have an extra AC1750 Smart WiFi Router (6400). I would like to set it up to work on the mesh network as a print server, sin...
- May 05, 2023
freeassociates wrote:
To be clear, I am looking to have this all on my main WiFi mesh network so that the R6400 is connected wirelessly.
Aha. That's a very different story from anything you have said so far.
Your original message said " Smart WiFi Router as print server". You didn't say how you wanted to connect the R6400 to the Asus router.
The easiest way is to do what I suggested, put the R6400 into AP mode and plug it into the Asus router.
What you now describe is wifi to wifi connection. That would mean putting the R6400 into wifi bridge (repeater) mode. That's a much more complicated move.
To do that, check the manual for the R6400 and read the section Set Up the Router in Bridge Mode.
It isn't easy, and might not even work with your anonymous router.
Your first message said "I would like to set it up to work on the mesh network as a print server".
Is there any reason why you can't plug the R6400 into the router? It would be there on the network for everything else. It would also be a lot easier to set up and manage.
freeassociates
May 05, 2023Aspirant
As you can tell, I know very little about how this works.
To be clear, I am looking to have this all on my main WiFi mesh network so that the R6400 is connected wirelessly. It won't be connected by ethernet, only via the WiFi signal. So I want it to receive data from the computers connected to our house-wide mesh network and send that data to the printer.
I have set it to AP mode. I have restarted it, then plugged it into the primary router. It was recognized in that setup and assigned an IP address, which I was able to use to access the GUI.
Now it is no longer plugged in via Ethernet.
It still shows up on the ASUS network and I can see its IP address there. (There is one called "R6400" and one called "NETGEAR" with adjacent IP addresses -- one number apart. Not sure why.) However, via WiFi, I can no longer connect to it via my browser. Not sure if that's expected or not.
I do see another WiFi network that the R6400 displayed as it was being set up ("NETGEAR55-5G") and can connect to that but it has no internet connection. Although my printer appears (sort of) when I'm connected to that network, communication doesn't appear to work. The printer is in the list of available printers to add, but I can't actually add it. I get an error that my computer can't communicate with the printer.
I'm really not sure what do from here. Can I actually set this up so that the R6400 gets signals from within the main WiFi mesh network and sends them to my printer? Or is what I'm trying to impossible?
This worked perfectly for years when I was using an Apple Airport Extreme (very old WiFi router) as a print server on my non-mesh WiFi network.
Thanks for your help.
michaelkenward
May 05, 2023Guru - Experienced User
freeassociates wrote:
To be clear, I am looking to have this all on my main WiFi mesh network so that the R6400 is connected wirelessly.
Aha. That's a very different story from anything you have said so far.
Your original message said " Smart WiFi Router as print server". You didn't say how you wanted to connect the R6400 to the Asus router.
The easiest way is to do what I suggested, put the R6400 into AP mode and plug it into the Asus router.
What you now describe is wifi to wifi connection. That would mean putting the R6400 into wifi bridge (repeater) mode. That's a much more complicated move.
To do that, check the manual for the R6400 and read the section Set Up the Router in Bridge Mode.
It isn't easy, and might not even work with your anonymous router.
Your first message said "I would like to set it up to work on the mesh network as a print server".
Is there any reason why you can't plug the R6400 into the router? It would be there on the network for everything else. It would also be a lot easier to set up and manage.
- freeassociatesMay 06, 2023Aspirant
Yes. The printer and the main WiFi router are nowhere near each other. And neither is next to my computer, though I do have an ethernet connection to the whole network there. So I would like to find a way to make the WiFi connection work for this. I'll check out the bridge setup instructions.
The frustrating thing for me is that the Apple Airport Extreme was SO easy to set up this way. Maybe I'll have to get something like that. Or a new printer with its own WiFi connection. - freeassociatesMay 06, 2023Aspirant
Okay, it worked. Sort of. My computer sees the printer on the network. I was able to set it up on my Mac (install it) and send a file to it.
But the printer only prints the first 2 lines of the text file I used to test it (figured I'd start with something simple) then seems to hang. I have the R6400 configured to use 5G WiFi as opposed to 2.4 G... think that has anything to do with it?
Meanwhile, I'll try testing the printer separately.
So close....
- freeassociatesMay 06, 2023Aspirant
It worked (finally)!
After several tries resulting in a few partially printed pages where the Canon just stopped after an inch or less, I unplugged and relaunched both the printer and the router and let everything settle down. Then tried it again. Success! At least for now.
I have the router set to join the network at 2.4 Ghz rather than 5 Ghz. I don't know if that actually matters for this, but it's working so I will likely not mess with it.
Normal printer installation via Bonjour. Once the R6400 was set up in bridge mode, the rest was pretty straightforward, if initially glitchy and unreliable. Now it's fine. Weird.
Thanks for all your help, Michael, and I hope this helps someone else in a similar situation,
- michaelkenwardMay 07, 2023Guru - Experienced User
freeassociates wrote:
I have the router set to join the network at 2.4 Ghz rather than 5 Ghz. I don't know if that actually matters for this, but it's working so I will likely not mess with it.
Beyond saying "Canon" you didn't say what model your printer is. Many, if not all, printers work only at 2.4 GHz. That is plenty fast enough for that sort of traffic. They will not see 5 GHz wifi, so on or off doesn't matter to the printer.
If this is a wireless printer, I'm surprised that you feel the need to use a USB "print server".
In my case, the iP7250 works fine as a network printer with a USB connection to one PC. Then the rest of the network can see it.
But if you have got the R6400 playing nicely, you can also use it to share USB storage over your network. I find that more useful than printer sharing.