F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop networking issue, please see if a solution exists pt 2

networking issue, please see if a solution exists pt 2

networking issue, please see if a solution exists pt 2

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Guang_ge
Junior Member
43
01-03-2026, 07:07 PM
#11
I'm still trying to understand the setup. Could you check each device and list their specific models? It seems like your ISP is providing a shared Ethernet network, but it's unclear how the static IP fits in. If they have assigned a public IP, it’s confusing since you wouldn’t typically use both private and public addresses on the same local network. You might need to set up some kind of tunneling method, like VLANs or L2TP, to handle that.
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Guang_ge
01-03-2026, 07:07 PM #11

I'm still trying to understand the setup. Could you check each device and list their specific models? It seems like your ISP is providing a shared Ethernet network, but it's unclear how the static IP fits in. If they have assigned a public IP, it’s confusing since you wouldn’t typically use both private and public addresses on the same local network. You might need to set up some kind of tunneling method, like VLANs or L2TP, to handle that.

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Greendon
Junior Member
10
01-05-2026, 04:47 AM
#12
You want your network to function normally while also setting up a server for gaming with friends. The Ark: Survival Evolved server setup has been too troublesome, especially after playing other games like Raft and Borderlands 3 without issues. The ports need to be opened, but the ISP said they can't do that.
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Greendon
01-05-2026, 04:47 AM #12

You want your network to function normally while also setting up a server for gaming with friends. The Ark: Survival Evolved server setup has been too troublesome, especially after playing other games like Raft and Borderlands 3 without issues. The ports need to be opened, but the ISP said they can't do that.

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NylodnewgPlaZ
Member
187
01-12-2026, 06:12 AM
#13
Do you know the model and brand of the access point with Wi-Fi you used?
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NylodnewgPlaZ
01-12-2026, 06:12 AM #13

Do you know the model and brand of the access point with Wi-Fi you used?

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mining4loot
Junior Member
3
01-12-2026, 07:38 AM
#14
This is quite a commotion with the H510.
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mining4loot
01-12-2026, 07:38 AM #14

This is quite a commotion with the H510.

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Ast1on
Junior Member
15
01-12-2026, 07:41 PM
#15
He’s still obsessed with raft, honestly, I’m trying to get him to play GTFO. We just finished a long run in Borderlands. Right now, let’s ignore the port forwarding stuff—there are several methods that don’t require your ISP, so you can just point fingers at them. That’s the simple part. What we need to tackle next is making sure your DHCP and NAT are functioning properly.
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Ast1on
01-12-2026, 07:41 PM #15

He’s still obsessed with raft, honestly, I’m trying to get him to play GTFO. We just finished a long run in Borderlands. Right now, let’s ignore the port forwarding stuff—there are several methods that don’t require your ISP, so you can just point fingers at them. That’s the simple part. What we need to tackle next is making sure your DHCP and NAT are functioning properly.

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AllenOs
Junior Member
3
01-12-2026, 08:42 PM
#16
The initial two digits of your static IP address are 192.168.1.100. This setting is applied directly through the router's interface.
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AllenOs
01-12-2026, 08:42 PM #16

The initial two digits of your static IP address are 192.168.1.100. This setting is applied directly through the router's interface.

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byDemon14
Junior Member
17
01-13-2026, 05:32 AM
#17
the access point is a noisy H510, i don’t know what modem it uses, but it came from the ISP. the router is a Belkin F7D3302, so this setup is brand new. it’s only been used because the ISP said they couldn’t open ports for the server, but they offered me a static IP address, which I could then use with a router that supports port opening and hopefully solve my issue.
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byDemon14
01-13-2026, 05:32 AM #17

the access point is a noisy H510, i don’t know what modem it uses, but it came from the ISP. the router is a Belkin F7D3302, so this setup is brand new. it’s only been used because the ISP said they couldn’t open ports for the server, but they offered me a static IP address, which I could then use with a router that supports port opening and hopefully solve my issue.

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duhazneubin
Senior Member
583
01-13-2026, 06:58 AM
#18
Typically, after getting a fixed public IP address, you place all devices on your local network behind the router so you can forward ports as needed. The mix-up comes when both static IP and DHCP are managed through the same service, which isn’t expected for a public IP but might work for private or CG-NAT setups.
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duhazneubin
01-13-2026, 06:58 AM #18

Typically, after getting a fixed public IP address, you place all devices on your local network behind the router so you can forward ports as needed. The mix-up comes when both static IP and DHCP are managed through the same service, which isn’t expected for a public IP but might work for private or CG-NAT setups.

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luna_gamer
Member
66
01-15-2026, 01:20 PM
#19
24 is the initial two digits. It is configured as the internet connection type on the Belkin router, alongside DNS, gateway, and subnet mask details supplied by the ISP.
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luna_gamer
01-15-2026, 01:20 PM #19

24 is the initial two digits. It is configured as the internet connection type on the Belkin router, alongside DNS, gateway, and subnet mask details supplied by the ISP.

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YanGamingIL7
Junior Member
32
01-21-2026, 02:40 AM
#20
The initial phrase is clear and understandable. The second part could be adjusted to fit your intended language or tone while keeping the same meaning. Let me know if you'd like further clarification!
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YanGamingIL7
01-21-2026, 02:40 AM #20

The initial phrase is clear and understandable. The second part could be adjusted to fit your intended language or tone while keeping the same meaning. Let me know if you'd like further clarification!

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