Hi,
Appreciate an answer to a solution we are considering.
I have two WIMAX ISPs with static IP addresses. My ethernet lines from the WIMAX masts are not close to my SmartTV and another 3 devices (a Nintendo Switch, a Mag IPTV box and an Android box), so we are using homeplugs.
Is this solution viable:
1. We want to run both WIMAX ethernet lines from the receivers on the roof into a double ethernet port homeplug, and attach POE to both lines to power them.
2. Then we plug in another single port homeplug next to our TV and run an ethernet line in to a TP Link R470T+ load balancer router to configure both ISPs. We plug the homeplug ethernet cable in to the WAN port of the R470T+ load balancer router and configure both WANs to use both ISPs based on their separately allocated IP addresses.
3. We now have 3 WAN/LAN ports and a single LAN port available on the R470T+ load balancer router.
4. We plug in our 3 devices to the 3 WAN/LAN ports on the R470T+ load balancer router.
5. We don't have WIFI yet, and we have no more WAN/LAN ports available, so we plug a separate TL-WR841N WIFI router in to the LAN port of the load balancer.
Would this solution be viable? We need to have WIFI and have our TV and other devices Internet accessible over a physical line as it is faster and more reliable.
Could we allocate one device to one ISPs network to "spread the load", so to speak? Are there other solutions even?
Thanks ever so much.
Mark
P.S. Simple network diagram attached of what i am trying to achieve.
Appreciate an answer to a solution we are considering.
I have two WIMAX ISPs with static IP addresses. My ethernet lines from the WIMAX masts are not close to my SmartTV and another 3 devices (a Nintendo Switch, a Mag IPTV box and an Android box), so we are using homeplugs.
Is this solution viable:
1. We want to run both WIMAX ethernet lines from the receivers on the roof into a double ethernet port homeplug, and attach POE to both lines to power them.
2. Then we plug in another single port homeplug next to our TV and run an ethernet line in to a TP Link R470T+ load balancer router to configure both ISPs. We plug the homeplug ethernet cable in to the WAN port of the R470T+ load balancer router and configure both WANs to use both ISPs based on their separately allocated IP addresses.
3. We now have 3 WAN/LAN ports and a single LAN port available on the R470T+ load balancer router.
4. We plug in our 3 devices to the 3 WAN/LAN ports on the R470T+ load balancer router.
5. We don't have WIFI yet, and we have no more WAN/LAN ports available, so we plug a separate TL-WR841N WIFI router in to the LAN port of the load balancer.
Would this solution be viable? We need to have WIFI and have our TV and other devices Internet accessible over a physical line as it is faster and more reliable.
Could we allocate one device to one ISPs network to "spread the load", so to speak? Are there other solutions even?
Thanks ever so much.
Mark
P.S. Simple network diagram attached of what i am trying to achieve.
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