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Topic:
Do you provide your own router?
This thread has 18 replies. Displaying posts 16 through 19.
Post 16 made on Wednesday September 6, 2017 at 17:34
3PedalMINI
Loyal Member
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Posts:
July 2009
7,860
At minimum they get an EERO, most jobs will get a Edgemax router with ruckus or unifi. For the big jobs Chris gets a call and it's ruckus and tik.

I will not accept a check from a client if I can't take over the network. You buy a Sonos from me your getting a network. I've grown too old and wise, my patience has run too thin too. ISP provided gear is literally the bottom feeder shit.
The Bitterness of Poor Quality is Remembered Long after the Sweetness of Price is Forgotten! - Benjamin Franklin
Post 17 made on Wednesday September 6, 2017 at 20:10
Mr. Brad
Advanced Member
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April 2008
934
Yes, an Araknis.

We just started providing cable modems too. Tired of the Spectrum BS!!!!
Post 18 made on Thursday September 7, 2017 at 15:32
ichbinbose
Select Member
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Posts:
August 2011
1,824
On September 5, 2017 at 10:16, highfigh said...
What are you all doing with ATT U-Verse internet? They say they don't have a stand-alone modem and for the models that were used until recently, NAT can't be disabled and it can't be set to Bridge mode. They use only Arris in the Milwaukee area, although they now have gateways that can be set to disable NAT- I'll be trying this with the new one I received last week. I wanted a replacement because WiFi sucked with the one they originally sent (and its replacement). I had been using a Luxul as an access point and that was flawless.

I have been reading comments in a local online bulletin board from people who have ATT and Spectrum- they're having problems with both and they aren't getting good solutions.

so I run into uverse more often than I would like. We still ALWAYS put in a real router as those things are real POS.
Here's how.
Step 1. Put unit into DMZ mode.
Step 2. create static route in Uverse unit to Router (in our case always a mikrotik)
Step. 3 make sure that the uverse unit is providing a WAN connection and not LAN connection to our router.
Step 4. turn off all wifi on the uverse POS.
Step 5. Install anything you want onto the network
Post 19 made on Saturday September 9, 2017 at 15:19
Anthony
Ultimate Member
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May 2001
28,867
On September 6, 2017 at 16:34, Craig Aguiar-Winter said...
So I can just plug a router into the bell router, and then use mine as the main network, just be sure the SSIDs are different as the Bell network will still be active?

Craig

yup, you can also turn off wireless on the fibe router if you don't need it (i.e. TV box wired to fibe modem, fibe modem wired to your router, other devices wired/wirelessly to your router)
...
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