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Forum Discussion

LovelyCalliope's avatar
Oct 03, 2020
Solved

Help Modifying DHCP Range

Hello, 

 

I am new to the community and this is my first forum post. I am taking a graduate class that requires me to adjust the DHCP range on my router to allow for use of some of the IP addresses for my course work. I am running this on a Windows 10 system. I am fairly new to this area of expertise so when I go into my routerlogin.net settings and attempt to view the DHCP Settings under Advanced>Setup>LAN setup the option to view or set up LAN is greyed out as I have shown in the screenshot below. I cannot find a guide that explains what I need to do to access my LAN set up. I would appreciate any advice or insight on this problem. Thank you in advance. 

 

 

  • > [...] I am taking a graduate class that requires me to adjust the DHCP
    > range on my router [...]

     

       Then you should do that.  But, as your picture shows, your R7000 is
    configured as a wireless access point ("Operation Mode:Access Point"),
    not as a router, which disables its DHCP server:

     

          https://kb.netgear.com/26765

     

       Presumably, your R7000 is connected to some actual router, with a
    (working) DHCP server, where you could make the desired change.

     

    > Model: R6900|Nighthawk AC1900 Smart WiFi Router

     

       Not according to your picture.

     

    > [...] I am running this on a Windows 10 system. [...]

     

       An "ipconfig" command on the Windows system should reveal its
    "gateway" IP address, which should be that of your actual router.

2 Replies

  • > [...] I am taking a graduate class that requires me to adjust the DHCP
    > range on my router [...]

     

       Then you should do that.  But, as your picture shows, your R7000 is
    configured as a wireless access point ("Operation Mode:Access Point"),
    not as a router, which disables its DHCP server:

     

          https://kb.netgear.com/26765

     

       Presumably, your R7000 is connected to some actual router, with a
    (working) DHCP server, where you could make the desired change.

     

    > Model: R6900|Nighthawk AC1900 Smart WiFi Router

     

       Not according to your picture.

     

    > [...] I am running this on a Windows 10 system. [...]

     

       An "ipconfig" command on the Windows system should reveal its
    "gateway" IP address, which should be that of your actual router.

    • LovelyCalliope's avatar
      LovelyCalliope
      Aspirant

      Thanks for the info, as I stated.. I am new so please forgive any mistakes on my part. I will reconfigure my router and hopefully that will resolve it. Your reply is much appreciated!