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I just bought an AirLink wireless modem and am trying to connect it to my
Westell 6100. I've spent a week or so so far. Verizon chat/e-mail/tutorials have not been helpful. Anyone know what Westell settings need to be changed (or any other advice)? The Westell is setup with an Ethernet rather than a USB connection. thanks art skidmarks |
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#2
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skidmarks wrote:
> I just bought an AirLink wireless modem and am trying to connect it to my > Westell 6100. I've spent a week or so so far. Verizon chat/e-mail/tutorials > have not been helpful. Anyone know what Westell settings need to be changed > (or any other advice)? > > The Westell is setup with an Ethernet rather than a USB connection. > > thanks > art > First call you ISP and tell them to configure your modem into bridge mode. What this does, is it turns off the ability to route. Therefore, it would make sense that you have to plug a router into your modem now, so it can route in place of your modem. You will want to ask your ISP the following questions: - What is my IP address. - What is my mask or subnet mask (same thing) - What is my gateway address. (this may be the same address as your IP or it may be different) Then, connect up your router and plug your PC directly into it. Check your PC's tcp/ip configuration to ensure that you PC is using DHCP. This means that you PC will ask the router to assign it an IP address. The using your router manual or a software disk that comes with your router, run the set up and configure your router to use the IP , mask, and gateway that your ISP provided to you. That is all there is to it. Of course, you will want to go back and set up some security options on your wireless connection. Then turn on your laptop and try to connet. DarthOdor |
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#3
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On Oct 14, 3:48 pm, "skidmarks" <aschw...@acm.org> wrote:
> I just bought an AirLink wirelessmodemand am trying to connect it to my > Westell 6100. I've spent a week or so so far. Verizon chat/e-mail/tutorials > have not been helpful. Anyone know what Westell settings need to be changed > (or any other advice)? > > The Westell is setup with an Ethernet rather than a USB connection. Most telecom instructions for DSL setup say 'do this or that' and just plain avoid saying what or why is ongoing. Many who are knowledgeable of the technology are still completely confused by the telco's documents. Telco will starve us of facts as if everyone is too dumb to understand and should instead always call technical support. First establish whether your Westel is in bridge mode or router mode. In router mode, your Westel's server has an IP address accessed from ethernet port and another IP address viewed from its DSL connection. If in bridge mode, then something on the Westel ethernet port (ie modem inside the Airlink router) would have that DSL address and Westel server in that bridge would not be accessible from computer's ethernet port. Whereas putting the Westel in bridge mode will eliminate latency (that is only important in real time applications such as chat, VOIP, or gaming), that bridge mode makes diagnostic analysis slightly more complex and mostly from indicator lamps. Again, the telco so starves us of information that assistance from the telco is often necessary to change to bridge mode. Long before converting a Westel to bridge mode, first get the current (default) configuration to work with an already working Westel and computer. Start by collecting facts. What is the address of that Westel modem from computer's perspective. Typically it would be 192.168.1.1. IOW from Command Prompt, if you enter PING 192.168.1.1 , then a properly working Westel at that address will echo that ping. Do this to also become familiar with the PING diagnostic. At any time, if you have doubt about computer making a connection, then use PING to test access to that IP port address. Computer would have an IP address assigned by the DHCP server inside the Westel. Confirm this by two methods. First method, view Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) properties for the computer's Ethernet port by right clicking on Local Area Connection icon, and then selecting Properties. Highlight Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) from the list and click on the radio button 'Properties'. Either the computer lists its (static) IP address 'Use the following IP address', OR its IP address is leased from the Westel modem under 'Obtain an IP address automatically'. Second method is obtained from entering IPCONFIG /ALL (on same Command Prompt window that executed PING). Finally, view server pages inside using the browser to access URL 192.168.1.1 - the Westel's IP address. Bottom line: data shows the computer connected to Westel modem and provides numbers for that connection including mask, IP address, hardware (physical) address and other information. Now move on to configure the Airlink. Airlink's router must get its IP address for a server inside that wireless port from Westel's DCHP server. Easier is to change that router from maybe a default 192.168.1.1 address anything else such as 192.168.1.3 . Obviously the Westel already has the 192.168.1.1 assigned. A server inside the Airlink router should use another address such as 192.168.1.3 . Setup the Airlink router by first connecting it to the computer with no Westel connection. Computer can now access server inside Airlink probably by entering 192.168.1.1 in browser - see Airlink documentation for further information or URL address. Setup pages will appear. The Airlink default (or server) address must be changed to anything but 192.168.1.1 and the Airlink's DHCP server must be disabled. Anything that would get an IP address automatically should get it from the Westel's DHCP server. Best is to have only one DHCP server (Westel's or Airlink's) enabled. That DHCP server would also list the range of 192.168.1.x addresses that can be leased. Once the Airlink server has an address other than 192.168.1.1, then the Airlink is ready to connect to the Westel, and computer connects to Westel via Airlink ethernet ports. Make those cable changes now. Once connections are established and confirmed using PING, and servers at 192.168.1.1 and 192.168.1.3 can be accessed, then use setup page for Airlink's Wireless port to setup that connection. Notice stepping through the problem. First confirm if and how computer connects through Westel. Then setup the Airlink router (and modify its address to something unique from Westel) using computer. Then cable computer to Westel via Airlink ethernet ports. Verify (ie using PING) so that computer can connect to Westel through Airlink. Finally setup the Airlink's Wireless port. Stepping through the setup in a sequential manner is how to break a setup process into parts, then confirm each part works properly (using PING and the browser) before trying to setup the next part. BTW, you do like a challenge? |
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| Tags |
| 6100, airlink, arn, setup, verizon, westell |
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