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Reply to: WIFI question

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Previously on "WIFI question"

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  • Freamon
    replied
    Originally posted by bobspud View Post
    What I did was buy a pair of solwise gigabit network over power line filters. I have an apple airport extreme in my office that uses the solwise as it's back bone to the BT router in the house. Works really well. I also have my Sonos plugged into it as well. As a bandwidth test, I can play spotify tracks, the Sonos and run two concurrent iplayer sessions all at once...

    Cost me about £50 (had previously spent several hundred quid trying to make various different routers cover the office and house...
    The ones I've got are the cheap ones and you certainly don't get anything like 100mbps over them. Got them off ebay for about 15 quid I think. Need to invest in some AV-grade (i.e. gigabit) ones really.

    Leave a comment:


  • bobspud
    replied
    Originally posted by suityou01 View Post
    Thanks Wim but I don't think you got what I was asking. Here is the step in the article that blows it out of the water :



    My wifi router is in the house. My ethernet is in the office. I want to connect the two wirelessly.
    What I did was buy a pair of solwise gigabit network over power line filters. I have an apple airport extreme in my office that uses the solwise as it's back bone to the BT router in the house. Works really well. I also have my Sonos plugged into it as well. As a bandwidth test, I can play spotify tracks, the Sonos and run two concurrent iplayer sessions all at once...

    Cost me about £50 (had previously spent several hundred quid trying to make various different routers cover the office and house...

    Leave a comment:


  • Pondlife
    replied
    Originally posted by Freamon View Post
    Assuming you have mains electricity to the office then I think you've bought the wrong product. Return it to whence it came and get some powerline adaptors off ebay.
    That.

    Leave a comment:


  • TraceRacing
    replied
    Another vote for the homeplug solution... works up to 300m on the house mains.

    I've got one near my router and the other in my garage for my NAS.

    Only problem I've found is that as the NAS "was" set to hibernate after 10 mins of inactivity, the homeplug goes into standby mode 5 mins later to save electricity. I've solved the problem by removing the hibernate setting and am working on a better solution of waking the homeplug up as the NAS is easy to wake up as it's a PITA going to the garage and rebooting the home plug.

    If you are active on the connection it's not a problem....

    Leave a comment:


  • Vanilla
    replied
    Good call Freamon :thumbsupsmiley:

    Leave a comment:


  • Freamon
    replied
    Assuming you have mains electricity to the office then I think you've bought the wrong product. Return it to whence it came and get some powerline adaptors off ebay.

    Leave a comment:


  • doodab
    replied
    Originally posted by suityou01 View Post
    OK so I set it up in bridge mode. I can ping the bridge, but not past it to the router in the house. Why is it not "Bridging"?
    Because you need to configure the house router in bridge mode as well. Otherwise it doesn't know that it has to send replies for a particular source address to your new gadget.

    Leave a comment:


  • doodab
    replied
    You will probably need to do some configuration on your router to get things to work in bridge mode.

    I use two identical access points in Bridge mode to create a wireless link between my office and the room with my ADSL modem in. They needed configuring so that they are using the same SSID and channel and each knows the MAC address of the other as well as various other configuration options having to be the same. I'm using the WDS mode which is a standard of sorts (although compatibility issues are not uncommon) but there are also point to point and point to multipoint modes which I think are a bit more vendor specific.

    Client mode sounds like it should just connect to the wireless network and allow the wired devices to communicate. This may or may not work with more than one wired device connected though.

    The other modes will not do what you want.

    Leave a comment:


  • suityou01
    replied
    Originally posted by Vanilla View Post
    Are you using the AP diagnostics to ping the remote AP or from your PC?
    Both.

    Leave a comment:


  • Vanilla
    replied
    Are you using the AP diagnostics to ping the remote AP or from your PC?

    Leave a comment:


  • suityou01
    replied
    Originally posted by Vanilla View Post
    Did it detect the SSID of your house AP? Also double check the MAC address that you probably had to put in as part of the bridge configuration.
    Yes. Yes. It has a search facility that finds the SSID of the house router, and gets the MAC addy automagically.

    Interestingly the status shows it has sent 182 packets (and rising) and yet got nothing back.

    Leave a comment:


  • Vanilla
    replied
    Did it detect the SSID of your house AP? Also double check the MAC address that you probably had to put in as part of the bridge configuration.

    Leave a comment:


  • suityou01
    replied
    Originally posted by Vanilla View Post
    It's the right type of kit however have you established a connection with your primary AP? As you're trying to link 2 wired networks then "Bridge" is the option you want, the repeater options will only work if you are connecting to the extender using wireless kit in your office.
    OK so I set it up in bridge mode. I can ping the bridge, but not past it to the router in the house. Why is it not "Bridging"?

    Leave a comment:


  • Vanilla
    replied
    It's the right type of kit however have you established a connection with your primary AP? As you're trying to link 2 wired networks then "Bridge" is the option you want, the repeater options will only work if you are connecting to the extender using wireless kit in your office.

    Leave a comment:


  • suityou01
    replied
    Originally posted by VectraMan View Post
    What IP address is assigned to something in the house?

    "Client" or "Bridge" sounds like the right thing. You don't want it to be a router, you want it to connect as if they were all connected to the same ethernet switch.
    OK router in house = 192.168.1.1

    Newfangled Client/Bridge/Repeater = 192.168.1.50

    Leave a comment:

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