Jul 25, 2011 · If you want both routers to work on the same subnet, you also have to worry about disabling DHCP on one router, etc. We can leave all the options to default using this dual-subnet method. Also, since we will be using a router, both networks will be able to talk to each other.

Possible only as two separate network and SSIDs. Pros? Cons? RBRs can't work in satellite mode, only router or AP mode. Having two wifi signal in close proximity could be problematic. One would need to be on channel 1 while the other would need to be on channel 11 on 2.4Ghz. Same goes for 5Ghz. Best set up if possible? DHCP enabled on Router 2 - all devices connect to Router 2 on a different range - router IP / gateway of this network would be 192.168.1.1). From the above we can go two routes. 1. Feb 04, 2016 · Give both APs the same network name (SSID), the same security type (WPA2-PSK recommended), and the same wireless security passphrase. Many clients assume that these kinds of settings will be the same across all APs with the same SSID. If you just set that up it will use the best AP around (when the end-user device commits it's periodically May 17, 2017 · Router 2. In most cases, this router must be wired to the original router. Consider a wireless media bridge or by running a single network cable in this case to the other location. Disable the DHCP server on this router to prevent IP conflicts or network configuration issues allowing only Router 1 to manage the network. Oct 18, 2019 · Re: Can 2 Routers have a same external IP address? This is certainly possible if your ISP is using CNAT. The most common CNAT IP range starts with 100.X.X.X (you can find it on the WAN port of the router). HELP! I have a healthy Fios installation-one set top box, one high speed router supplied by Fios, and a wireless network that for a while has been serving my needs. WHAT I WANT TO DO-I want to set up a secondary wireless network in a different area of the property that has a coaxial cable already r

Same goes for TV3 can see the MY CLOUD, but TV1 and TV2 on the different router not. So there are actually two seperated networks (also two different wifi networks). Now what I want, is to set up the netgear router, so all the devices will be on the same network. For example so PC1 can see PC4 on the network. Or TV1 can see the MY CLOUD on the

May 17, 2017 · Router 2. In most cases, this router must be wired to the original router. Consider a wireless media bridge or by running a single network cable in this case to the other location. Disable the DHCP server on this router to prevent IP conflicts or network configuration issues allowing only Router 1 to manage the network. Oct 18, 2019 · Re: Can 2 Routers have a same external IP address? This is certainly possible if your ISP is using CNAT. The most common CNAT IP range starts with 100.X.X.X (you can find it on the WAN port of the router). HELP! I have a healthy Fios installation-one set top box, one high speed router supplied by Fios, and a wireless network that for a while has been serving my needs. WHAT I WANT TO DO-I want to set up a secondary wireless network in a different area of the property that has a coaxial cable already r Mar 23, 2016 · You also should not have two routers on the same network if both can act as DHCP servers. What you'd need to do is decide which router will be the DHCP server first. You can leave the address at

I have installed 2 Linksys routers type WRT160N and a WRT160Nv3. Both ar DHCP installed, channels are 1 & 10, IP adresses are divided so Linksys 1: 192.168.1.1 - 149 and Linksys 2 :192.168.1.150 - 200. If anybody have another idea please come forward. Many thanks in advance.

HOw to setup two routers from two different ISPs to share same network By clarencefm · 7 years ago One of my clients recently subscribed to a second ISP and is connected using a UMAX router (WIMAX). May 21, 2014 · As a result, Your client router should have an IP address in the same subnet as the primary router. So, if the primary router has an IP address of say, 192.168.1.1, you could set the IP address of the client router to 192.168.1.2. With this option, both routers are in the same subnet (192.168.1.x). to simply put it having two routers on the same subnet is not possible as the purpose of a router is to route traffic between DIFFERENT networks. In order to accomplish this you will need routers and switches that understand VLANs and VLAN tagging. Hope this Helps. Blake Wright. Cisco SBSC Network Engineer