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Forum Discussion
Net001
Dec 27, 2017Tutor
Cascade Router
Hi, I want to separate networks in my house and currently have a linksys router as the primary and is the one connected to the modem and would like to have this R8000P as the secundary. I am guesing...
- Jan 06, 2018
Hi,
Long story short:
configuration used: LAN-WAN
With Netgear (secondary router) default settings:
1.-Changed SSID and password.
2.-Connected Netgear's Internet yellow port to Linksys's (Primary router) LAN port.
This way there was a conflict because both routers had the same LAN IP segment but the
Netgear Router changed its LAN IP to 10.0.0.1 automatically (but had to powercycle the unit) and 10.0.0.2 as the starting IP address.
3.- Powercycle Netgear router
The Linksys (Primary) asigned a 192.168.1.x to the Netgear internet IP address.
The Linksys as I mentioned before is the one connected to the modem (outside world).
The goal was to keep two separate LAN's with different SSID's and passwords and with the steps followed above I was able to achieve the goal.
I also tried changing the Netgear's (Secundary) LAN IP segment to 192.168.2.1 and also works. Note that this change in the IP address was done before making the physical connection LAN-WAN.
I hope this help.
antinode
Dec 27, 2017Guru
> If your aim is to keep the wifi networks separate, then using unique
> SSIDs and passwords would be an option.
If you want only your own devices to connect to your own router, then
different SSIDs on the two routers is a _requirement_, not an option.
> In that case, you could use the R8000P as an wifi access point. Give
> that SSIDs and passwords that only you know and the neighbour won't be
> able to get at your devices.
Not really. If one router is configured as a wireless access point
(WAP, what that Linksys doc calls a LAN-LAN configuration), then there
is only one LAN, and all devices share it. The only "isolation" in such
a configuration is a restriction on which devices can connect to which
wireless access point (the one in the main router, or the one in the
WAP-only WAP). Once a device has joined the (single) LAN, using either
wireless access point, it will be on the same (single) LAN as every
other device, no matter whose radio it's using. This is exactly what
you don't want.
Net001
Jan 06, 2018Tutor
Hi,
Long story short:
configuration used: LAN-WAN
With Netgear (secondary router) default settings:
1.-Changed SSID and password.
2.-Connected Netgear's Internet yellow port to Linksys's (Primary router) LAN port.
This way there was a conflict because both routers had the same LAN IP segment but the
Netgear Router changed its LAN IP to 10.0.0.1 automatically (but had to powercycle the unit) and 10.0.0.2 as the starting IP address.
3.- Powercycle Netgear router
The Linksys (Primary) asigned a 192.168.1.x to the Netgear internet IP address.
The Linksys as I mentioned before is the one connected to the modem (outside world).
The goal was to keep two separate LAN's with different SSID's and passwords and with the steps followed above I was able to achieve the goal.
I also tried changing the Netgear's (Secundary) LAN IP segment to 192.168.2.1 and also works. Note that this change in the IP address was done before making the physical connection LAN-WAN.
I hope this help.