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Standalone Wireless Router + Home Network

 
 
dan
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      11-23-2007, 03:46 PM
Linksys Etherfast Router (BEFSR41)
Linksys Wireless Access Point (WAP11)

I'm pretty sure this can be done but I'm looking for potential issues
or suggestions for a better setup.

I need to have the cable modem and router setup away from any
computers. That is, once the router is setup, disconnect the computer
from it so that the only thing the router is hardwired to is the modem
and wireless access point.

Then all computers on the network will be connected to the network via
the wireless WAP11.

To perform maintenance, I'd need to attach a computer to the router.
I'm guessing I could do this wireless, but I don't think that would be
too safe.

Will this work? Better suggestions?

I work from home using a VPN connection to my company. Will I notice a
significant performance drop using wireless vs wired? I'll be about 15
feet from the wireless access point.

TIA!

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Jeff Liebermann
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      11-23-2007, 05:23 PM
"dan" <> hath wroth:

>Linksys Etherfast Router (BEFSR41)
>Linksys Wireless Access Point (WAP11)


The WAP11 is not the worlds best access point. It's 802.11b only and
will be fairly slow at 3Mbits/sec thruput maximum. There are about 5
hardware versions of the WAP11. Look on the serial number sticker.

>I need to have the cable modem and router setup away from any
>computers. That is, once the router is setup, disconnect the computer
>from it so that the only thing the router is hardwired to is the modem
>and wireless access point.


The cable modem goes to the WAN (internet) port on the BEFSR41.

The WAP11 goes to the cross over port on the BEFSR41. Some versions
of the BEFSR41 have automagic cable polarity. Some have a 5th LAN
port labelled MDI/MDIX or something similar. Just try the CAT5 cable
first in the regular LAN ports and check if the lights on the front
panel light up when the cable is connected. If not, try the MDI/MDIX
port.

>Then all computers on the network will be connected to the network via
>the wireless WAP11.


Yep. That's what an access point does.

>To perform maintenance, I'd need to attach a computer to the router.


Nope. The WAP11 and BEFSR41 both have IP addresses. The default for
the BEFSR41 is 192.168.1.1. The WAP11 varies slightly by hardware
version but is usually either 192.168.1.50 or 192.168.1.251. Just
point your web browser at these IP addresses, login, and configure.

>I'm guessing I could do this wireless, but I don't think that would be
>too safe.


Some hardware versions of the WAP11 support WPA-TKIP encryption. With
a long (greater than 20 chars) and convoluted pass phrase, the
security from either hacking or sniffing is more than adequate.
However, WEP encryption should be considered as insecure and useless.
Additional security measures, such as MAC filtering, SSID hiding, are
a waste of time if the basic encryption is insecure.

>Will this work? Better suggestions?


It will function, but I don't think you'll like it. The problem is
that the WAP11 is 802.11b only and slow. Your cable modem is much
faster than the 3Mbits/sec that the WAP11 can deliver *AT BEST*. The
quality of the radio inside the WAP11 is tolerable, but also will be
disappointing, as modern chipsets work much better. I suggest you do
some shopping and buy a new combination router and wireless.

>I work from home using a VPN connection to my company. Will I notice a
>significant performance drop using wireless vs wired? I'll be about 15
>feet from the wireless access point.


For 15ft, you could probably run a CAT5 cable. But, that's no fun and
too easy.

Sorta. Your VPN performance is primarily limited by your outgoing
cable bandwidth. The 3Mbit/sec maximum thruput of 802.11b is faster
than whatever your outgoing bandwidth might be, so there will not be a
huge slowdown. However, screen redraws, which are limited by the
incoming bandwidth will be slower as will responsiveness to keyboard
actions. I'm fairly sure you'll see a slowdown, but I can't really be
sure how much.

Also, I have quite a bit of experience with the older BEFSR41 routers.
There mostly ok, but are rather limited on horsepower. That shows up
in various ways, but is really evident on VPN pass-thru performance.
The later hardware versions were tolerable, but early versions were
glacially slow if you ran an IPSEC VPN through them. They would also
only handle one VPN session through the router at a time. For a
typcial home system, that's not a problem, but I keep running into
situations where it becomes a problem, such as dad working at home
through a VPN, and junior picking up his homework from skool through
the schools VPN. I've replaced a few routers because of this problem.

Buy some modern hardware please. Ask your office IT people for their
favorite routers and wireless. The implication of having them make
the recommendation is that they are able to set it up for you and
possibly troubleshoot problems better with something they are familiar
with.

--
Jeff Liebermann (E-Mail Removed)
150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558
 
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