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PUPIL's avatar
PUPIL
Aspirant
Jun 07, 2018
Solved

Nighthawk App / Genie Do Not Recognize R7000 - Help?

Recently switched service providers to a company called Beanfield here in Toronto...

 

They put a (non wi-fi) router in my condo's telecom box, and allowed me to bring my own R7000 as the wi-fi router. Look at the back of the unit, they've plugged the ethernet jack into #1 on the rear of the Nigthhawk - not the "internet" jack.

 

When I plug the ethernet jack into "internet", altough the networks are available there is no actual connection.

 

Meanwhile, I can't connect to the router using either the Nighthawk or Genie apps, and the routerlogin.net doesn't work either.

 

I'm not sure if it's related but ever since the switch my iCloud and Mac Mail accounts have also gone all wonky. Plus, I'd like to update my firmware. 

 

Can anyone help me out here???

  • Hi PUPIL, 

     

    Welcome to NETGEAR Community! 

     

    If R7000 is on bridge mode then check your main router admin page and get the R7000 IP address. You can access the R7000 admin page using its IP address. 

     

    Regards, 
    Blanca 
    Community Team

4 Replies

  • Blanca_O's avatar
    Blanca_O
    NETGEAR Employee Retired

    Hi PUPIL, 

     

    We’d greatly appreciate hearing your feedback letting us know if you need further assistance.
     

    Regards, 
    Blanca 
    Community Team

  • P.S. Apparently the router has to be in "bridge" mode for their services to function - whatever that means. Really stumped. Pardon my lack of technical know-how. 

    • Blanca_O's avatar
      Blanca_O
      NETGEAR Employee Retired

      Hi PUPIL, 

       

      Welcome to NETGEAR Community! 

       

      If R7000 is on bridge mode then check your main router admin page and get the R7000 IP address. You can access the R7000 admin page using its IP address. 

       

      Regards, 
      Blanca 
      Community Team

      • antinode's avatar
        antinode
        Guru

        > They put a (non wi-fi) router in my condo's telecom box,

           It might be nice to know what that "a (non wi-fi) router" is.

        > [...] and allowed me to bring my own R7000 as the wi-fi router. Look
        > at the back of the unit, they've plugged the ethernet jack into #1 on
        > the rear of the Nigthhawk - not the "internet" jack.

           That might have made a limited amount of sense, but it may or may not
        be the right thing to do with an R7000.  Probably not, but that would
        depend on how the R7000 was configured.

        > When I plug the ethernet jack into "internet", although the networks
        are available there is no actual connection.

           I'll assume that by "the networks" you mean the wireless networks
        (SSIDs).  I don't know what "no actual connection" means.  No internet
        access?

        > Meanwhile, I can't connect to the router using either the Nighthawk or
        > Genie apps, and the routerlogin.net doesn't work either.

           "can't" and "doesn't work" are not useful problem descriptions.
        They do not say what you did.  They do not say what happened when you
        did it.  As usual, showing actual actions with their actual results
        (error messages, LED indicators, ...) can be more helpful than vague
        descriptions or interpretations.

        > P.S. Apparently the router has to be in "bridge" mode for their
        > services to function - whatever that means. [...]

           Says who?

           Can you connect a computer (your Mac?) directly to the ISP's router
        (and get to the Internet properly)?  If so, then what is the IP address
        of that Ethernet interface?  (On a Mac, System Preferences > Network
        should show that in "Status:".)  If that's a private IP address (like,
        say, "192.168.x.y" or "10.x.y.z"), then that really is a NAT router, and
        you probably ought to configure your R7000 as a wireless access point,
        rather than as a full-function router (its default mode).  That might be
        what someone meant by '"bridge" mode', but Netgear normally uses the
        term "bridge" for something else.

           With an ISP-supplied router between your ISP and your R7000, you can
        expect to have some problems with names like "routerlogin.net".

           For details on configuring your R7000 as a wireless access point,
        visit http://netgear.com/support , put in your model number, and look
        for Documentation.  Get the User Manual.  Look for "Use the Router as a
        Wireless Access Point".  To make that change, disconnect the R7000 from
        everything but power, and connect your computer to it (wirelessly, if
        necessary).  In that case, "routerlogin.net" should work, and you should
        be able to put the R7000 into WAP mode.  Then connect it to the ISP's
        router as shown in the R7000 documentation (using its WAN/Internet
        port).  When that's done, you should have Internet access through the
        R7000 and the ISP's router.

           With the R7000 configured as a WAP, names like "routerlogin.net" will
        not work, and you'd need to access the R7000 management web site by its
        IP address.  You'll probably need to get that from an
        "Attached/Connected Devices" (or "DHCP Clients", or similar) report from
        the ISP's router.  With no information on the ISP's router, it's tough
        to provide specific advice on that part.