LJSeinfeld
New Around Here
Scenario:
The only broadband available to my home is crummy 6mbit down/768kbit up Frontier DSL. If I'm doing anything else on the internet durning gaming, the gaming sucks. I have installed an additional DSL connection that I use primarily for gaming. It is installed near my entertainment center. The gaming router is bridged, and the routing is being handled by a Netgear XR500 with DumaOS
I also have my 'main' connection (another DSL modem) set up in another room. This modem is also bridged and routing is being handled by an Asus RTN66U running latest (as of today) MerlinWRT firmware.
All devices are on the same LAN subnet so the TV, ShieldTV, XBOX, Receiver, computers, printers, phones, yada are all reachable from the LAN. DHCP is only enabled on the Main router, and I do manual assignments for things that get to use the Gaming router. Example: Main router is 192.168.11.1, Gaming router is 192.168.11.2 and I use 192.168.11.2 as the gateway for my xbox/whatever else I decide to use it, with a manual IP assignment to the device that I'm relegating to the Gaming router.
__________________________
Everything has been working swimmingly. Until the last few days. When I noticed I couldn't reach a network printer, I looked at my WIFI connection on my laptop and noticed it showed I had an IP address that looked to be assigned by Frontier... routable to the internet. I looked at other WIFI devices and saw the same thing (unique addresses on each, but none of them my LAN schema.. routable WAN addresses).
A reboot of one or both modem/router combos seems to clear this up... for awhile.
I am so confused... How could any device behind a router, much less all of them, be given an address outside of the DHCP pool / a WAN address?
The only broadband available to my home is crummy 6mbit down/768kbit up Frontier DSL. If I'm doing anything else on the internet durning gaming, the gaming sucks. I have installed an additional DSL connection that I use primarily for gaming. It is installed near my entertainment center. The gaming router is bridged, and the routing is being handled by a Netgear XR500 with DumaOS
I also have my 'main' connection (another DSL modem) set up in another room. This modem is also bridged and routing is being handled by an Asus RTN66U running latest (as of today) MerlinWRT firmware.
All devices are on the same LAN subnet so the TV, ShieldTV, XBOX, Receiver, computers, printers, phones, yada are all reachable from the LAN. DHCP is only enabled on the Main router, and I do manual assignments for things that get to use the Gaming router. Example: Main router is 192.168.11.1, Gaming router is 192.168.11.2 and I use 192.168.11.2 as the gateway for my xbox/whatever else I decide to use it, with a manual IP assignment to the device that I'm relegating to the Gaming router.
__________________________
Everything has been working swimmingly. Until the last few days. When I noticed I couldn't reach a network printer, I looked at my WIFI connection on my laptop and noticed it showed I had an IP address that looked to be assigned by Frontier... routable to the internet. I looked at other WIFI devices and saw the same thing (unique addresses on each, but none of them my LAN schema.. routable WAN addresses).
A reboot of one or both modem/router combos seems to clear this up... for awhile.
I am so confused... How could any device behind a router, much less all of them, be given an address outside of the DHCP pool / a WAN address?
Last edited: