Choose your cart
Choose your cart
Receive up to $504 promo credit ($180 w/Welcome Unlimited, $360 w/ 5G Start, or $504 w/5G Do More, 5G Play More, 5G Get More or One Unlimited for iPhone plan (Welcome Unlimited and One Unlimited for iPhone plans can't be mixed w/other Unlimited plans; all lines on the account req'd on respective plans)) when you add a new smartphone line with your own 4G/5G smartphone on an eligible postpaid plan between 2/10/23 and 4/5/23. Promo credit applied over 36 months; promo credits end if eligibility requirements are no longer met.
$699.99 (128 GB only) device payment purchase or full retail purchase w/ new smartphone line on One Unlimited for iPhone (all lines on account req'd on plan), 5G Start, 5G Do More, 5G Play More or 5G Get More plan req'd. Less $699.99 promo credit applied over 36 mos.; promo credit ends if eligibility req’s are no longer met; 0% APR.
I would like to turn off wi-fi on the router and leave it turned on for the extender. The router is two feet from my head during the work day and I want to turn that wi-fi off but leave the extender wi-fi which is on the other side of the basement. Seems that the extender just repeats all the router settings including wi-fi on/off. Is there a way to make it so the setting can be separate between the router and extender?
My work computer is hard wired to the router so turning off router wi-fi is not a problem.
thanks for any suggestions
Solved! Go to Correct Answer
Yes. You just need to place the extender and the router on two separate network segments. E3200 discovers G3100 through SSDP, which uses IGMP and IP multicast. Multicast has TTL of 1, so a layer 3 device between the router and the extender can effectively stop their discovery of each other.
Another method is just to have a quasi-firewall device between the two to block UDP port 1900 for SSDP. Creating two network segments and quasi-firewall can both be accomplished through a managed switch.
A managed switch with port-based firewall is not typically found in the consumer price range, however.
For example, I would configure it as such in my switch.
Cisco ACL Config
Yes. You just need to place the extender and the router on two separate network segments. E3200 discovers G3100 through SSDP, which uses IGMP and IP multicast. Multicast has TTL of 1, so a layer 3 device between the router and the extender can effectively stop their discovery of each other.
Another method is just to have a quasi-firewall device between the two to block UDP port 1900 for SSDP. Creating two network segments and quasi-firewall can both be accomplished through a managed switch.
A managed switch with port-based firewall is not typically found in the consumer price range, however.
For example, I would configure it as such in my switch.
Cisco ACL Config