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Forum Discussion
Jellikit
Nov 08, 2022Guide
Bridge mode?
I have a primary router in my house, where the internet comes in. From there, I have a cat 6 cable running from the primary router, to a secondary router (about 100’) out into my garage/guest house. W...
FURRYe38
Nov 08, 2022Guru - Experienced User
The better mode would be AP mode:
https://kb.netgear.com/20927/How-do-I-change-my-NETGEAR-router-to-AP-mode
What NG router are you referring too?
- JellikitNov 08, 2022GuideThe primary router is a NETGEAR C7000, and the secondary is a NETGEAR R6900v2
- JellikitNov 08, 2022Guide
Thanks for the help. I am still a bit confused….
For example, my speakers drop out when in my garage. Speaker manufacturer suggested setting secondary router in bridge mode.
The article you sent states:
“If you are installing your router with an ISP gateway that supports bridge mode, we recommend that you enable bridge mode on your ISP gateway and install your NETGEAR router in router mode instead of AP mode.“
I am not sure what to do… any advice is Greatly appreciated…..
- JellikitNov 09, 2022GuidePlease see my information in the 2 separate messages…..
- plemansNov 09, 2022Guru - Experienced User
Bridge mode gets confusing because different manufactures refer it to doing different things.
With your setup, if you've got a hardwired connection into the garage, set the 2nd device in AP mode. It disables its routing functions so there isn't a double nat.
If you're still getting drops while in the garage and its connected to the garage router's wifi, then there's a couple things to check.
1. make sure the garage router is using different wifi channels from the house wifi.
2. Make sure the house---garage wired connecting is operating well. Hardwire a pc/laptop into the garage router and test its speeds. What do you get hardwired?
3. make sure your garage devices are on 5ghz if its available. Its a much faster network and has less interference
If your devices are struggling to swap from house to garage wifi, you might actually need to turn the broadcast power down on the home/garage routers so devices will roam more efficiently. Since you're not using a mesh system like orbi, there isn't the smart roaming features so devices tend to be more sticky and not roam as well.
- JellikitNov 09, 2022Guide
Thank you for the information. Before I try your suggestion, I have one more question. The items I have the most problems with are my Sonos speakers. They drop out I think because they want to be on the same network as my house? They are controlled from an app on my phone . I believe this is why the manufacturer suggested bridge mode? I am totally unsure and also open to anything. I have an office, guest room, and small work out area in my garage and it would be nice if I could get the sound system to work properly. Since the sound system is run from an app, and most of the speakers are in the house, is an access point still the way to go on the garage router? Or bridge? Or some other system or configuration? Thank you so much!
- michaelkenwardNov 09, 2022Guru - Experienced User
plemans wrote:
Bridge mode gets confusing because different manufactures refer it to doing different things.
Even worse, you don't have to go to different makes to get confused. You will find at least three different sorts of "bridge mode" in Netgear's own manuals.