rossi2000, can this be used as a standalone router or does it need to be connected to a modem?
rossi2000, can this be used as a standalone router or does it need to be connected to a modem?
VU+ Ultimo 4K 3TB, 1x Twin DVBS-2 FBC / 1x DVB-C FBC/ 1x Twin DVB-T2.
VU+ Solo4k 2TB, 2xFBC-S2, 2xC/T2, 1x Sundtek .
1m Motorised Single LNB Dish, 60cm Fixed Octo LNB Dish.
Samsung 65HU8500 with SEK-3500, Denon AVR-X2200W 5.1.2.
Oppo UDP-203
Panasonic 55VT50.
Zidoo X9S
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That's good so I can use it instead of the router provided by my ISP.
Ha ha have no idea if it is still for sale but I can only ask. If it wasn't I would of thought the thread would have been closed.
Just had a quick look in the for sale section and noticed it.
But you will still need to use your router provided by you IP if it is a combined modem/router.
With cable you would just put it into modem mode.
VU+ Ultimo 4K 3TB, 1x Twin DVBS-2 FBC / 1x DVB-C FBC/ 1x Twin DVB-T2.
VU+ Solo4k 2TB, 2xFBC-S2, 2xC/T2, 1x Sundtek .
1m Motorised Single LNB Dish, 60cm Fixed Octo LNB Dish.
Samsung 65HU8500 with SEK-3500, Denon AVR-X2200W 5.1.2.
Oppo UDP-203
Panasonic 55VT50.
Zidoo X9S
Amazon Fire TV 4k & Amazon Fire TV (SPMC sideloaded).
What's supplied by an ISP is usually a modem/router. That means that the modem part connects to the phone line (for ADSL or VDSL) or to the cable provider's feed (for Virgin/UPC or whatever) in order to extract the internet protocol data. The router part distributes the data to your home devices, either wirelessly or via CAT 5/6 cable. The device on sale (or sold) in this thread is just a standalone router with wi-fi capabilities so it is perfectly capable of connecting to and routing data to all your home devices (your LAN), but it needs another device to connect to the internet (WAN). This could be a cable modem or ADSL/VDSL modem. Either way, it will need a CAT 5 (RJ45) patch cable to connect to a modem.
The reasons people use these standalone routers vary from needing better wifi coverage to having faster cabled LAN performance or for security reasons or whatever. In the case of your EE supplied modem/router you would put it into bridge mode and turn off all wifi and routing settings. Then you would connect the WAN port of the ASUS router into one of the EE modem LAN ports. You would also need to put your ISP user name and password into the ASUS so it can connect through the EE modem.
The alternative is to get your own router with modem capabilities but you need to ensure that it is compatible with your ISP. In my setup I have a Vodafone supplied VDSL modem/router in bridged mode and use a TP-Link Archer C7 router to support my home LAN and wifi. Hope this makes it clearer
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dfox (13-10-16)
dfox (13-10-16)
...or you could be really creative and route stuff where speed is critical through your existing router, and stuff that is mystical through your vpn router which is what i do...
VU+ Ultimo 4K 3TB, 1x Twin DVBS-2 FBC / 1x DVB-C FBC/ 1x Twin DVB-T2.
VU+ Solo4k 2TB, 2xFBC-S2, 2xC/T2, 1x Sundtek .
1m Motorised Single LNB Dish, 60cm Fixed Octo LNB Dish.
Samsung 65HU8500 with SEK-3500, Denon AVR-X2200W 5.1.2.
Oppo UDP-203
Panasonic 55VT50.
Zidoo X9S
Amazon Fire TV 4k & Amazon Fire TV (SPMC sideloaded).
dfox (13-10-16)
i guess the question was answered. thanks all.
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Vu Solo4K, OpenViX 5.0, 8xdvb-s2
Dreambox DM900, OpenViX 5.0, 2xdvb-s2, 2xdvb-c/t2
Terrestrial, Cable, Fixed 28.2e + Unicable2 LNB
Just going back to your post about putting my EE supplied router in bridge mode.
There is not an option for that when I looked but I read somewhere about putting it in fibre/ethernet mode and then turning off DHCP and wifi settings?
Havent got another router yet but when I do I might have some questions ha ha