Ok, here's the situation:
I've been running two AC-66U's for the past year and a half with no issues, one as router, the other a repeater. I recently bought an RT-AC3200 which I am using as my new router. Not using Smart Connect, so I have three SSID's configured. The two 5ghz radios are configured so that one uses channel 36, and the upper band is configured to use 161 at 80mhz width. Works great.
My downstairs AC66U Repeater has no issues connecting to the upper band 5ghz and using that as the backhaul channel. This also enables me to have two additional SSIDs downstairs, "Asus2d" for 2.4 and "Repeater_5G" for the downstairs 5ghz radio.
All wireless client devices clients connect just fine to the repeater's 5ghz EXCEPT one of my two Galaxy5s's . My wife's (which is still running KitKat) connects without issue, but mine (which is now running Lollipop) refuses to connect to the repeater's 5ghz. I've tried everything, including changing channels, changing channel widths, etc., and nothing will allow it to connect to the repeater. My Galaxy has no issues connecting to either of the 5ghz channels on the AC3200.
So I thought I'd try something different with the downstairs Repeater: I changed the settings for the Repeater to operate in "Media Bridge" Mode. That works fine too (and in fact my wired devices downstairs get way better connectivity and speed) but of course, using Media Bridge means no additional downstairs SSID's since Media Bridge mode turns off the ability to connect clients via wifi, and you can only connect devices via the LAN ports. That's fine because where I have the Repeater/Bridge located, all the devices are connecting via Ethernet anyway (e.g., HTPC, SmartTV, Denon Receiver, Roku, etc.).
But I have additional downstairs devices that need wireless connections (can't run LAN cables), and I would like to connect them independently from the AC3200. So since I have an extra AC66U, I thought I'd try to set up my second AC66U as an "Access Point" connecting it to one of the Media Bridge's LAN ports. But that hasn't worked. And that's the problem.
Is it even possible to do this? Can you run an AP off of a wirelessly connected Bridge?
I've tried assigning a manual, static IP for the AP (192.168.1.2), but I cannot get any internet connectivity. Setting the AP to "AP Mode" is supposed to turn off DHCP and routing on the AP, so that it gets that from the Router, and thus at least theoretically, the AP should be getting routing and DNS from the router. But it's not happening.
No matter what settings I've tried, I just cannot get the AP to connect to the internet.
I would have thought that the Media Bridge, when functioning as a Bridge, just passes the DHCP and routing through to connected devices from the router (at least that's how I understand it's supposed to work), and thus it's supposed to be the functional equivalent of running a long Ethernet cable to those wired devices that get connected to the Bridge.
So if that's the case, why doesn't connecting an AP with a static assigned IP to the Media Bridge reasult in the router handling DHCP and giving clients connected to the AP via its wireless a valid network IP address? What am I missing here?
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
I've been running two AC-66U's for the past year and a half with no issues, one as router, the other a repeater. I recently bought an RT-AC3200 which I am using as my new router. Not using Smart Connect, so I have three SSID's configured. The two 5ghz radios are configured so that one uses channel 36, and the upper band is configured to use 161 at 80mhz width. Works great.
My downstairs AC66U Repeater has no issues connecting to the upper band 5ghz and using that as the backhaul channel. This also enables me to have two additional SSIDs downstairs, "Asus2d" for 2.4 and "Repeater_5G" for the downstairs 5ghz radio.
All wireless client devices clients connect just fine to the repeater's 5ghz EXCEPT one of my two Galaxy5s's . My wife's (which is still running KitKat) connects without issue, but mine (which is now running Lollipop) refuses to connect to the repeater's 5ghz. I've tried everything, including changing channels, changing channel widths, etc., and nothing will allow it to connect to the repeater. My Galaxy has no issues connecting to either of the 5ghz channels on the AC3200.
So I thought I'd try something different with the downstairs Repeater: I changed the settings for the Repeater to operate in "Media Bridge" Mode. That works fine too (and in fact my wired devices downstairs get way better connectivity and speed) but of course, using Media Bridge means no additional downstairs SSID's since Media Bridge mode turns off the ability to connect clients via wifi, and you can only connect devices via the LAN ports. That's fine because where I have the Repeater/Bridge located, all the devices are connecting via Ethernet anyway (e.g., HTPC, SmartTV, Denon Receiver, Roku, etc.).
But I have additional downstairs devices that need wireless connections (can't run LAN cables), and I would like to connect them independently from the AC3200. So since I have an extra AC66U, I thought I'd try to set up my second AC66U as an "Access Point" connecting it to one of the Media Bridge's LAN ports. But that hasn't worked. And that's the problem.
Is it even possible to do this? Can you run an AP off of a wirelessly connected Bridge?
I've tried assigning a manual, static IP for the AP (192.168.1.2), but I cannot get any internet connectivity. Setting the AP to "AP Mode" is supposed to turn off DHCP and routing on the AP, so that it gets that from the Router, and thus at least theoretically, the AP should be getting routing and DNS from the router. But it's not happening.
No matter what settings I've tried, I just cannot get the AP to connect to the internet.
I would have thought that the Media Bridge, when functioning as a Bridge, just passes the DHCP and routing through to connected devices from the router (at least that's how I understand it's supposed to work), and thus it's supposed to be the functional equivalent of running a long Ethernet cable to those wired devices that get connected to the Bridge.
So if that's the case, why doesn't connecting an AP with a static assigned IP to the Media Bridge reasult in the router handling DHCP and giving clients connected to the AP via its wireless a valid network IP address? What am I missing here?
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
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