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doublegUSTL's avatar
doublegUSTL
Aspirant
May 28, 2020
Solved

Changing the DHCP address to the same range of IP addresses on my Nighthawk x10

I was wondering if anyone could help me. Im trying to get my Nighthawk X10 router to allow DHCP on the same network address range as the rest of my network.  Currently its giving out IP addresses with the 192.168.1.1-250 range.

Im using this router to connect a couple of remote computers in our plant to our ERP system, and if the IP address range isnt within the 192.168.0.xx - 250 range it cannot connect.   Ive tried various things, but im still unable to get it to put out an IP address on the range i need.  Could anyone advise me to what im doing wrong?

Is this setting within the LAN TCP/IP setup? Maybe thats what im doing wrong, but i changed it and was unable to connect after changing that.

 

thank you

 

  • antinode's avatar
    antinode
    May 28, 2020

    > [...] Would it be considered a wireless access point if you have it
    > plugged into your LAN though?

     

       A wireless access point is called that because it provides wireless
    access to client devices, not because it uses a wireless connection to
    the LAN.  (It uses a wired connection to the main router/LAN.)

     

       Recent Netgear manuals tend not to include useful pictures, but if
    you go to the appropriate page on the R9000 management web site, you
    might find some visual aid there.

3 Replies

  • > [...] Im using this router to connect a couple of remote computers in
    > our plant to our ERP system, [...]

     

       If you expect the R9000 to join an existing LAN subnet (like, say,
    "192.168.0.*"), rather than creating its own (default: "192.168.1.*"),
    then you might want to configure the R9000 as a wireless access point,
    rather than as a full-function router.

     

       Visit http://netgear.com/support , put in your model number, and look
    for Documentation.  Get the User Manual.  Read.  Look for "Use the
    Router as a WiFi Access Point".

     

       That way, the existing DHCP server will (continue to) do all the
    work.

    • doublegUSTL's avatar
      doublegUSTL
      Aspirant

      thank you for the reply. Would it be considered a wireless access point if you have it plugged into your LAN though?

      • antinode's avatar
        antinode
        Guru

        > [...] Would it be considered a wireless access point if you have it
        > plugged into your LAN though?

         

           A wireless access point is called that because it provides wireless
        access to client devices, not because it uses a wireless connection to
        the LAN.  (It uses a wired connection to the main router/LAN.)

         

           Recent Netgear manuals tend not to include useful pictures, but if
        you go to the appropriate page on the R9000 management web site, you
        might find some visual aid there.