3

The Setup:

  • wired D-link (EBR-2310) router connected to my cable modem.
  • Wireless NetGear N300 (WNR2000v3) router connected to a LAN port on the wired router.

What I'm trying to do:

I'm trying to setup the wireless router to be a separate network, that only accesses the internet through the wired router.

What I've done so far.

I setup the wireless router's WAN port to get an address from ISP (which should be coming from my wired router running DHCP), and the LAN as a subnet (192.168.1). Wired router's LAN is 192.168.0.

The problem:

I'm not able to connect to the internet from the wireless router. At one point my wired router showed that it was handing out an IP to the wireless router, but that is not happening anymore.

The question:

Is what I'm trying to do possible? Am I not thinking about this properly? Do I need to buy a better wired router, with 2 WAN ports? How can I configure these routers to work together?

2
  • @UltraDEVV what would the correct term be then? Also, I'm working with two routers. There is no modem involved.
    – Tester101
    Sep 22, 2014 at 20:07
  • I think attach or bind would be better words. (dont take it serious as I was joking. I am not a mother-born English speaker too.) What you actually wanna do? Connect the wireless router alone, If you wanna use internet wirelessly. What is the use of wired router?
    – UltraDEVV
    Sep 22, 2014 at 20:13

4 Answers 4

6
,--------.
|     wan+------- (ISP)
| Wired  |
|   lan  |
`---++++-'  ,------.
       `----+wan   |
            | Wifi |
            |  lan |
            `--++++'
               ||||
  1. Connect like shown above.
  2. Configure the Wifi router to receive the WAN address via dhcp.
  3. Profit
7
  • Yes. I've done that, and actually said exactly that in the question.
    – Tester101
    Nov 20, 2012 at 13:20
  • Well that's all you need to do, since your subnet settings are legit. Now you have a nice ascii diagram too! Nov 20, 2012 at 13:24
  • step 3... "Profit" hahahaha - gold Jun 8, 2013 at 16:09
  • You're missing the something magical step.
    – user
    Jul 18, 2013 at 13:43
  • @Tester101 The question didn't say that the connection was to the Wifi router's WAN port. May 13, 2014 at 23:06
0

Although I'm not 100% sure on the options inside each router specifically, on the surface yes, this seems very feasible.

Make sure the WAN port on the 2nd router is connected to the LAN port on the 1st router.

Most routers allow some basic firewall rules to be applied. In the 2nd router simply add a firewall rule to reject all traffic to the subnet on the 1st router... (excluding the ip of the IP of the 1st router itself). Once that's done... you'll be able to connect to the internet but not the private network.

There are much more elegant ways of doing this, but with home-grade equipment and factory-stock firmware... your options are limited.

1
  • Thanks for the answer, but it doesn't really help. I can't get the wireless router to connect to the wired router properly, so messing with firewall settings is the least of my problems at this point.
    – Tester101
    Jan 25, 2012 at 20:18
-1

For the sake of sanity, and the accepted answer, I will take a stab at describing your setup, the problem, and what troubleshooting steps to take if another user is in this situation.

The setup

enter image description here The problem

  • Clients connected to wireless router cannot reach the internet.

Troubleshooting steps

enter image description here

-5

Finally got it working.

Physical Connections:

I connected one of the LAN ports on the wired router, to the WAN port of the wireless router.

Configuration

I set up the wireless router to obtain an address from the ISP, so it would be assigned an address from the wired routers address pool. Next I set the wireless routers internal IP address to 192.168.1.1. Next I turned on DHCP on the wireless router, so it would hand out addresses to devices connecting to the 192.168.1.x network. Finally I waited, and waited.

Poor communication is bad for networking

Turns out the problem I was having was that the routers were not sharing information fast enough, and there was no way (that I could find) to force them to speak to each other. The wired router knew where the 192.168.0.x and the external (Internet) networks were, and the wireless router knew where the 192.168.1.x network was. But neither of them wanted to tell the other what they knew. Once they became friends and started talking, the problem resolved itself and everything worked fine.

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