Hi
Option 1. One big network.
The second Router should connect as an Access Point,
Here how,
http://www.ezlan.net/router_AP.html
Option 2. Two independent Networks,
http://www.ezlan.net/shield.html
Jack (MVP-Networking).
"mdb" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
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8TIi.13$Wo4.11@trnddc03...
>I do the network support in a school where there are about 40 computers all
>getting their IP's via wired connections back to some stacked switches and
>a Belkin router. They're in an old building constructed of heavy concrete
>with true plaster walls (meaning wire mesh under plaster). The librarian
>has asked about the feasibility of installing a wireless network in the
>library. Her library is downstairs and at the opposite end of the school
>from the current modem/router/switch location. My point here is that a
>wireless signal will not reach from the current location to the library.
>I've always said that a network can have only one DHCP server but I
>wondered if I might be wrong. Could I connect a wireless router to the
>current wired network drop in the library but have it pass out IP addresses
>in a different private ip address range than the IPs given out by the
>primary router upstairs? I suppose another way to do this would be to
>relocate the modem/router down to the library and have all computers
>acquire an address from the router there. But that recabling would be
>pretty expensive.
>
> The purpose of the wireless connection in the library is just to allow the
> librarian to move about the room with her laptop, freeing her from staying
> at her desk when she's giving lessons. This is an elementary school. Is
> there a way to make the wired connection that her desktop has available to
> her laptop? perhaps via Internet Connection Sharing?
>
> Does anyway see a good way to do this? I also considered access points
> between the current router and the library but we'd need so many because
> of the construction and the distance involved.
>
> Thanks.
>