F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks Need assistance with the internet?

Need assistance with the internet?

Need assistance with the internet?

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O
owen22s
Member
70
10-20-2023, 06:42 AM
#11
Set up the port to transmit using identical numbers twice. Adjust the configuration to route from the primary router to the secondary router within the main routers software, then modify it so the port operates from the second router to your connected device in the second routers software.
O
owen22s
10-20-2023, 06:42 AM #11

Set up the port to transmit using identical numbers twice. Adjust the configuration to route from the primary router to the secondary router within the main routers software, then modify it so the port operates from the second router to your connected device in the second routers software.

F
FaTaL_ZiPz
Member
51
10-20-2023, 08:12 AM
#12
On router 1, the second router is set up for portforwarding. On router 2, the device is configured to use portforwarding as well.
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FaTaL_ZiPz
10-20-2023, 08:12 AM #12

On router 1, the second router is set up for portforwarding. On router 2, the device is configured to use portforwarding as well.

M
mexicanninja98
Junior Member
19
10-26-2023, 05:50 PM
#13
correct
M
mexicanninja98
10-26-2023, 05:50 PM #13

correct

B
blokdragon45
Member
57
10-28-2023, 05:34 AM
#14
Either I am doing it wrong or it doesn't work. For reference, here's how I did it. I went to router 1 and checked ip of router 2, went to portforward that ip with the port 25565, then I went to router 2 and portforwarded my pc ip with the port 25565
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blokdragon45
10-28-2023, 05:34 AM #14

Either I am doing it wrong or it doesn't work. For reference, here's how I did it. I went to router 1 and checked ip of router 2, went to portforward that ip with the port 25565, then I went to router 2 and portforwarded my pc ip with the port 25565

J
Jordinosaur
Junior Member
17
11-03-2023, 03:04 PM
#15
Check your device's IP settings using cmd. Then trace the path to Google.com to see which router is involved.
J
Jordinosaur
11-03-2023, 03:04 PM #15

Check your device's IP settings using cmd. Then trace the path to Google.com to see which router is involved.

N
Nird_Bird
Member
165
11-03-2023, 04:48 PM
#16
Come back with the listed router addresses and IP details. It seems router 1 is using 192.168.50.1 while the traceroute showed another connection pointing to 192.168.50.1 as well. The two routers appear to be linked in a way that creates redundancy or unexpected routing paths.
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Nird_Bird
11-03-2023, 04:48 PM #16

Come back with the listed router addresses and IP details. It seems router 1 is using 192.168.50.1 while the traceroute showed another connection pointing to 192.168.50.1 as well. The two routers appear to be linked in a way that creates redundancy or unexpected routing paths.

K
Kittylu
Member
115
11-03-2023, 06:18 PM
#17
I'm sorry, I missed the domain name server. Here, this brief video will clarify it more clearly than I can:
K
Kittylu
11-03-2023, 06:18 PM #17

I'm sorry, I missed the domain name server. Here, this brief video will clarify it more clearly than I can:

S
stopmo
Member
175
11-03-2023, 09:04 PM
#18
Ensure your DNS and default gateway settings match. If they differ, update the gateway to align with your DNS configuration.
S
stopmo
11-03-2023, 09:04 PM #18

Ensure your DNS and default gateway settings match. If they differ, update the gateway to align with your DNS configuration.

K
kalleboii
Senior Member
738
11-03-2023, 10:37 PM
#19
Do you understand that routers 1 and 2 operate on entirely separate subnets? This will make configuration challenging. Your current arrangement needs adjustment; for basic home use, assign device 1 as the router and others as access points or switches. You likely don’t require a dedicated AP—many modern routers can switch to AP mode, keeping WiFi and switching capabilities while handing routing to another device. Which Asus model functions as the “second router”? Check its AP mode settings and switch it accordingly. Make sure the AP receives a static LAN IP within the same subnet as the first router but outside its DHCP range. Connect the AP’s gateway LAN IP to that of the first router. Once wireless devices are set as APs, you won’t need the WAN port; Ethernet traffic goes directly via LAN-to-LAN. That’s the complete setup! Adjust the required ports on the first router, and everything will flow through the AP with its firewall disabled.
K
kalleboii
11-03-2023, 10:37 PM #19

Do you understand that routers 1 and 2 operate on entirely separate subnets? This will make configuration challenging. Your current arrangement needs adjustment; for basic home use, assign device 1 as the router and others as access points or switches. You likely don’t require a dedicated AP—many modern routers can switch to AP mode, keeping WiFi and switching capabilities while handing routing to another device. Which Asus model functions as the “second router”? Check its AP mode settings and switch it accordingly. Make sure the AP receives a static LAN IP within the same subnet as the first router but outside its DHCP range. Connect the AP’s gateway LAN IP to that of the first router. Once wireless devices are set as APs, you won’t need the WAN port; Ethernet traffic goes directly via LAN-to-LAN. That’s the complete setup! Adjust the required ports on the first router, and everything will flow through the AP with its firewall disabled.

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