Jumpstarter
Senior Member
You didn't answer whether the satellite routers are in Mesh or AP mode.
Aimesh parent is in AP mode, satellite routers are in Aimesh node mode off the parent.
You didn't answer whether the satellite routers are in Mesh or AP mode.
Aimesh parent is in AP mode, satellite routers are in Aimesh node mode off the parent.
my robovacs, broadlink IR/RF devices and some future CCTV cameras
Thanks @tiddlywink, not what I wanted to hear but really appreciate your insightNo. Both models are EOL and you should not being using them as your main router. Your RT-AC5300 appears to run freshtomato and you should flash that ASAP.
vlans with intervlan routing is not newbie friendly and likely won't be for a while.
A) RT-AC5300 flashed with freshtomato and then find another freshtomato router to act as an AP; vlans will be unlocked and will work via GUI.
B) Any Asus filogic model flashed with openwrt will have full vlan support unlocked and accessible via GUI.
C) Merlin 3.0.0.6 with vlans/Guest Networking Pro on router and all nodes + manually scripting firewall changes
I think synology routers may have some kind of support for intervlan routing with default firmware.
I obviously want to keep costs down as much as possible but if push came to shove I'd probably replace the whole setup if that gave me peace of mind. The problem will be the requirement for above average networking skillsThis fear of IoTs will cost you entire setup replacement and with something better than home routers. It will also require way above average networking knowledge to setup.
Thx again @tiddlywink, much appreciated!Mediatek filogic SoC. TUF-AX6000, TUF-AX4200 RT-AX59U, RT-AX52, and a few cheaper models not yet released. A 10 second flash with openwrt gives full vlan and intervlan routing.
Run ethernet down those 10 meter corridors to eliminate the need for mesh networking forever. vlans and mesh is going to be beyond your capability. If you absolutely 100% must use mesh, stick with stock asus firmware.
Run ethernet down those 2 corridors, buy 2 TUF-AX4200's, flash openwrt, set basic network settings, create vlans, set firewall zones (i.e. intervlan routing), and that is it. No scripting and everything done with a GUI. There's no reason spend more money on worse small business devices from say Ubiquity or tplink.
The problem will be the requirement for above average networking skills
Yeah, where I live 3G/4G/5G reception is absolutely dreadful even on the best of days. And when the weather turns nice and the towers get congested forget about even opening a web page I've been out of a job since July so I've now got time to do a lot of improvement projects, the downside being that $$$ are now a direct opposite of time availabilityYou are adding on outdoor wifi 7 with 2.5G uplinks to serve devices at the beach?
"the easiest and cheapest way be to achieve this?"
Just go with ubiquity for everything and pretend it was cheap.
Problem with that will be that I'd actually need 3 devices if I understand correctly in that scenario as my IOT devices are spread across both front and back of the house. So 2 routers double NATed in the back building and an access point at the front of the house would suffice? I might look into this, move the AX56 next to the AC5300 and set it up as a second router instead of an AiMesh node and then put an AP at the front of the house. Assuming I can get IoT devices that connect to the AP instead of directly to the IoT router, to be routed by the IoT router in that scenario whilst non-IoT devices that connect to that AP would still be routed by the main router?This is a problem either way you go. The easiest - double NAT two routers, the first one serves your IoTs, the second one serves your "secured" clients. You'll have access from the second router network to the first router network, but not vice versa. Not ideal, but easy and cheap. Some folks use this method when the ISP provided device is a modem/gateway. IoTs, backup Wi-Fi, guest access, etc. No much networking skills required.
So 2 routers double NATed in the back building and an access point at the front of the house would suffice?
I'm starting to think that I could do without this headache indeed Maybe I'll look into switching to something like a full Ubiquiti solution as suggested to make life easier on myself once I land a new gigThis is going to be quite rough solution. Just connect your IoTs to the main network like 99% of the people do and continue your life just like before.
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