Thanks for the help. It is a free hotspot provided by the City of
West Sacramento. <lowered eyebrow>. I will give it a shot.
http://usatoday.jiwire.com/wi-fi-wir...st-sacramento-
california-ca-us-city-of-west-sacramento-1130351.htm
On Jan 28, 5:40 pm, "Eric" <nob...@nospam.nnn> wrote:
> "Tim" <timdavis...@hotmail.com> wrote in messagenews:(E-Mail Removed) ooglegroups.com...
>
>
>
>
>
> > There is a that I can connect to from outside of
> > my house (on the balcony) with my laptop internal wireless card, but
> > the signal is too poor to connect from my desktop computer. I have an
> > old Aironet access point (model AP4800-e), and I was wondering if I
> > could use that along with my Belkin Router (model F5D230-4) to
> > distribute the signal in my house. Right now I am just using the
> > access point to extend the range of my internal wireless network. I
> > would like to know if I can use my current equipment to get the job
> > done, or if I would be better off with newer equipment.
> > Router IP: 192.168.2.1
> > Access Point IP: 192.168.2.100
> > If this is possible, would need some help with the IP address
> > settings, and other random help. Thanks in advance. If there is any
> > information I left out, or if additional info is needed, I lurk on the
> > message board every day.If the AP can function as a "wireless client", then sure that would work
> just fine.
>
> The AP becomes just a wireless-ethernet bridge. My DLinks AP's all have
> this mode.
>
> Google to see if your Aironet AP does. Or, just simply try it.. If it
> does, then just plug your Beklin router straight into it.
>
> The AP "bridge" would get it's DHCP IP from the "neighborhood hotspot"
> <raised eyebrow>. The router will get it's WAN IP's from the "neighborhood
> hotspot" <raised eyebrow> through the AP. Other than that, its just a pipe.
> You can use whatever range of IP's you want on your private side..- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text -