CPE510 configured to Client mode but no internet
CPE510 configured to Client mode but no internet
Hello All,
I have a CPE510 which I configured as Client mode, the CPE connects to a Dev AP signal and receives the signal just fine. The network is configured to DHCP so when I set my laptop to DHCP, it received the correct IP's, Gateway, and DNS information but I cannot get out to the internet.
The CPE510 IP is x.x.159.254 /24
The gateway on the CPE510 is set to x.x.159.1
No DNS on the CPE (I have also added the DNS here to troubleshoot but same result)
Laptop IP: x.x.159.166 /24
Gateway: x.x.159.1
DNS: x.x.159.201, 8.8.8.8
From the CPE510, I can ping my gateway, DNS/DHCP server, google.com, etc...
From my laptop, I can only ping the CPE510 and nothing else on the network.
I have upgraded the firmware on the CPE510, moved it closer to the AP, adjusted the CPE to receive it's IP information automatically(DHCP) but nothing helps. The laptop I'm using is a Mac but I have also tried a Windows PC and same result
Any help would be greatly appreciated!!!!!
- Copy Link
- Subscribe
- Bookmark
- Report Inappropriate Content
I have adjusted my settings and am now receiving a snr of 85dB but the same problem still persists. From my LAN I can ping up to the TP-Link but nothing that's connected to it. Same going out, the end devices can ping TP-Link but nothing past it. The TP-Link itself can ping anything on the internet so I know it's not a networking issue. Something is wrong with the way end devices communicate w/ the TP-Link and vice versa.
The network settings on the CPE have been changed to Dynamic, the CPE receive the correct ip information from any WLAN I connect it too but any end device connected to the TP-Link does not receive an IP.
I am fresh out of ideas at this point, this is bizzare. I have contacted TP-Link support but have not received a response in over week.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
J_peg wrote
I have adjusted my settings and am now receiving a snr of 85dB but the same problem still persists.
A SNR of 85 dB?
You probably mean that your signal level is -85 dB (which is a pretty bad value). Measure noise level, subtract it from the signal level (for example: -85dB signal level minus -90 dB noise level equals 5 dB SNR). SNR must be 20 or higher for data transmission. Your SNR in last Status screenshot was 13 dB (-76 dB SL – -89 dB NL = 13 dB SNR). It seems to fluctuate between 9 and 13 dB since SL horizontally was reported as -80 dB, so -80 dB SL – -89dB NL = 9 dB SNR. This are real world values:
- 10dB - 15dB SNR = Very low signal (1 bar); mostly associated; mostly slow.
- 5dB to 10dB SNR = No signal; not associated; no go.
See http://www.wireless-nets.com/resources/tutorials/define_SNR_values.html
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
SOLVED!!
I was so focused on the networking behind the CPE510 that I completely forgot about WDS.
The WDS setting was set to auto, once I disabled this, everything worked as normal and I was able to reach the internet from any end device that was connected to the CPE510
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
WDS is unrelated to traffic between wired clients and the CPE.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
Thank you so much @J_peg this exact same thing was happening to me with the CPE210 connecting to a Netgear R6700. I worked with support on the phone for 45 minutes before they hung up on me when they ran out of ideas. Disabling WDS worked like a champ.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
Information
Helpful: 0
Views: 12237
Replies: 15
Voters 0
No one has voted for it yet.