Its still a bit confusing.
It looks like I want lan to lan but what mode do I put the second router in?
I think a certain mode would defeat dhcp and I wouldn't need to enter ssid or password info for second router as that would all be handled by the primary router, correct?
Also what about wireless settings on secondary router?
What would be applicable to all the above if I use an old ASUS ac68 router as a secondary?
Thanks for the reply's and your help here guys.
I've read the link many times and its still not very thorough as there are no settings for the second router there other than its IP address. So I don't put second WRT1900 in any special mode, just duplicate the settings from primary WRT1900, set it to .2 and turn off DHCP? What happens to the fixed IP's on my network? I want the wireless to be seemless and as strong as possible
(Maybe I'm making this more complicated than it is!)
OK so here's what I have
2nd WRT1900:
SSID's same as primary
2.4 and 5 channels same
passwords same
lan to lan
Now primary WRT keeps disconnecting, can't even bring up SNB website
Right now, I have 2nd WRT turned off
What am I missing?
Channels and SSID'S need to be different.
I guess I'm going at this all wrong then
I want to increase the wireless range of my primary wireless, not have another
wireless network that I would have to connect to as I walk to the far end of my property. And I don't not want to lose bandwidth thus the ethernet connection between routers.
Is there a way to accomplish what I want?
Thanks again for your help
Not to my knowledge. A wireless device will stay connected to a signal until it completely loses connection. Only then will it latch onto another signal.
Not 100 percent true - client mobility and handover is a feature in many enterprise wireless setups - Cisco is especially good at this. Aruba, if enabled at the wireless controller, is also fairly good at it.
In the ProSumer space - Apple does a nice job with this - at least within their ecosystem on a roaming Airport network.
For others - as long as you have common SSID, common WPA2 PSK's, and all AP's are on the same subnet, layer2 handovers should work fairly transparently - it is a break, then make connection, but again, depends on the client stack to some degree..
sfx
Thanks for the info sfx,
On some wireless devices I have see an error occur "Duplicate Network" for two wireless signals with the same SSID within range of each other but that was rare.
Which devices?
If that's the case, it's a bug in the device...
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