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Forum Discussion
Britracer44
Sep 12, 2021Guide
AC1900 - R7000 configured as AP
I am trying to get wi-fi to a metal shop in my yard, I have an IP supplied router with a mesh system. I have an antenna on my shop exterior pointed to the mesh box on the house, then a N Male to RP ...
plemans
Sep 12, 2021Guru
In access point mode, the R7000 would need to be hardwired into the primary router to get an IP address.
From the sound of it, you've just used a bigger antenna to try to connect the r7000 to the primary router.
that'd be extender/repeater mode.
To get back into the r7000, either hardwire it into your primary router or simply factory reset it.
- Britracer44Sep 13, 2021Guide
Thanks for the quick response, I did a reset and connected to my ISP router, I couldn't connect to my computer with an ethernet cable as the ISP router is connected to it, so I used my cell phone and finaly connected to the R7000 and changed the SSID and passphrase to the ISP routers.
I had gone on to several forums to find out how to get wi-fi into my shop and the consensus of opinion was a directional antenna pointed at the mesh that is on the house and connected to a router/AP inside the shop to broadcast wi-fi inside the building.
Thats what I did and.... it's not working.
Right now I'm frustrated, I can't run a cable that far which would obviously be the best answer and the power in the shop is not connected to the house power so a plug in AP is out of the question.
Any suggestions?
- plemansSep 13, 2021Guru
I think you have a bit of a misunderstanding. some of it could be different manufacturer's call things different.
1. Access point mode. It isn't what you think it is. In access point mode, the 2nd router HAS to be hardwired into the primary router. It isn't a wireless connection.
2. Extender/repeater mode on the R7000. This *might* work for you. Debatable because you have the antennas extenrnal to the building. So how does it broadcast inside the building. But this has the highest chance of success. In this mode, the r7000 picks up the wireless signal from the primary router and rebroadcasts it like a repeater/wireless extender
3. Bridge mode. In this mode, the router acts as a wireless bridge. It picks up a signal from the primary router but doesn't re-broadcast it. It simple connects to the router and allows you to use the ethernet ports as an access. You can connect another access point to that router so its broadcasting inside the building.
What the forums shoud have recommended for you was a point to point system with an access point connected to it.
A point to point system uses 2x devices. One on the building sending the signal and one on the building receiving. It acts as a wireless bridge between the 2 systems. In the simplest terms, it acts as an ethernet connection because its simply a connection between 2x points. Then you simply plug your access point into it to broadcast into the building.
You *might* be able to get your system running but try using extender mode. Or use bridge mode and connect another access point to it.
Access point mode IS NOT what you want unless you plan on burying a wire between the 2x buildings.
https://kb.netgear.com/24108/How-do-I-enable-the-extender-mode-feature-on-my-Nighthawk-router
- Britracer44Sep 13, 2021Guide
OK, I thought I was doing the point to point set up as you describe, I have the ISP supplied wired mesh mounted on the outside of my house, pointed at my shop. At the shop I have a Dual-Band outdoor high-gain, long range directional panel antenna pointed at the mesh. a low loss N male to RP SMA coax cable from that antenna to the R7000 wireless router configured as an access point to broadcast into the building.
That was the recommendation from two of the forums that I went on, obviously I have missed something along the way.
Do I need to buy an actual dedicated AP instead of the R7000?