
On Wed, Jan 7, 2015 at 10:05 PM, Thomas Milne <thomas.bruce.milne@gmail.com> wrote:
On Jan 7, 2015 9:33 PM, "Stephen" <stephen-d@rogers.com> wrote:
router 1 is 192.168.11.1, router 2 is 192.168.11.2
both have 255.255.255.0 as subnet mask
Router 1 gives out addresses starting at 192.168.11.5
Try giving the basement computer a static IP of 192.168.11.3 with gateway of 192.168.11.2
Well I have my Debian laptop connected to router 2 by ethernet as you describe for admin and testing, so ya I can view the router web interface and ping the router of course also.
Neither the laptop, nor the wirelessless (tm) computer can access the internet this way.
Make sure that you can ping the basement router
Make sure you can access the basement router's control panel
Make sure that the basement router has a gateway of 192.168.11.1
Yes
Use Open DNS on the basement computer
Not sure what you mean, sorry. You mean blank, or use OpenDNS, the company? The problem is it can't get past the router it is connected to so...
Try to ping an external IP
Try to ping a domain
Either using gateway of .1 or .2 made no difference at all.
No DNS, nothing. I tried 8.8.8.8, host unreachable.
Thanks for replying! This is driving me bonkers...router 2 will not communicate with router 1 and I can't see why.
Could the problem be that router 1 is dual band? ie. it has two SSID's, one for 2.4 and one for 5 GHz. -- Thomas Milne