SilentStorm
Regular Contributor
The way your are setup is fine. If you set DNS on your Asus Router to opendns or on your workstation, then you will be using opendns and getting all the benefits. You Asus router sees the XB6 as it's next hop router which probably has a gig link so you are not going to overload that. The interface of concern is the one of the XB6 to the ISP's router. If you are happy with jitter in synthetic tests or to 8.8.8.8 then you are fine. If you want to test further you can get on the XB6 and see it's default gateway that's the one you want to test to. Another way to find it is on your Asus router lower left corner "Network Tools" tab. Then top left tab "Network Analysis" select Method "Traceroute: and trace to any outside host for example www.google.com
The first hop listed will be the XB6, the next one might be *** which is ok. Just use the first one that lists and test to it. The timings you see next to the address are pings.
It sounds like you are well on the way to a much better experience
Morris
Interesting, I'm still receiving quite a bit of jitter, and I even tried to ping the IP you mentioned when I did the trace route (started with 99.xxxx)
Will changing the channel on my router help with this any at all? I know it's only for WiFi.
Also, I'm not sure what the difference is between the DNS setting under LAN and the DNS setting under WAN. Can you help me with that?
I know the last time I messed with this was on stock firmware, but when I did set a DNS server there, I was no longer able to access the router page. So it was weird.
Thanks again for your help thus far.