trenzterra
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Just got my internet installed yesterday. Using AX86U in db box with XD5 in the middle bedroom. Can get full bars throughout the house (4 rm bto)
Hello there,
Could someone please advise if my understanding (after reading couple of pages here on the thread) is correct for a 2 years old BTO flat?
Background info:
- Using google mesh wifi router with wifi point![]()
- Google nest router is in the DB box (enclosed in a cupboard next to the main door)
- Google nest point is in the kitchen
- Kitchen is most centralised part of the house
- Wifi is weak in master bedroom
- 4 data points at home:
- data point 1: study room- data point 2: living room- data point 3: master bedroom- data point 4: kitchen
Plan #1:
1. DB Box: Connect ONT to a 5-port switch
2. DB Box: Connect 5-port switch to all 4 data points of panel patch
3. Study: Connect CPU to data point 1
4. Living: Connect TV to data point 2
5. Master Bedroom: Connect Google nest point to data point 3
6. Kitchen: Connect Google nest wifi router to data point 4
Plan #2 :
1. Ditch current MyRepublic plan (up for renewal soon) for M1's GT-AX6000 plan
2. DB Box: Connect ONT to a 5-port switch
3. DB Box: Connect 5-port switch to all 4 data points of panel patch
3. Study: Connect CPU to data point 1
4. Living: Connect TV to data point 2
5. Kitchen: Connect GT-AX6000 WAN to data point 4
Thanks!
Either plan does not work. You can not use the following configuration.
ONT --> Switch --> wireless router
You need to use the following configuration.
ONT --> main wireless router --> switch --> PC/TV and mesh node.
BTW, Google Nest WiFi is pretty lousy mesh solution.
1) Google Nest WiFi Point has no LAN ports, you have to use wireless backhaul. It will still work if it can have line of sight with the main Nest WiFi router.
2) Google Nest WiFi does not support mesh in AP mode. This may not be a concern for you though.
You may have to post the floor plan (with details of the ONT and LAN ports) to see what is a better option for you. Please also state the budget.
Placement is also important. It is in general a bad idea to put the main wireless router in the cupboard.
Hello xiaofan,
Thanks for the very quick response man. Ah so it seems like the main wireless router has to be directly connected to the ONT with a cable?
Currently there's no line of sight and understand that Google nest is a pretty bad solution in general so am prepared to ditch it for something else. Budget wise, approx. $50/mth for a 1GBPS broadplan plan and approx $400 for a router? The GT-AX6000 seems like a good fit for me.
Yea definitely a bad idea to put main wireless router in cupboard which is why I am thinking of relocating it to the kitchen area via the data point there
Here's the floorplan, let me know if other info requried
#edit: my plan is only up for renewal in dec, so will have to make do with the google nest router in the meantime i guess
![]()
Random thoughts - what would happen if you place a switch between modem and router?
modem > switch > router
can you do this ----For one router it should still work. For two routers only one of them will work as only one will get DHCP address from the ISP.
You need a managed switch on both ends that allows you to segment WAN and LAN into different VLANs.can you do this ----
fibre > modem > switch > router.
then switch LAN 1234 to DB patch panel 1234?
assuming router is not in db.
can you do this ----
fibre > modem > switch > router.
then switch LAN 1234 to DB patch panel 1234?
assuming router is not in db.
You need a managed switch on both ends that allows you to segment WAN and LAN into different VLANs.
Yes, essentially like this.Please help to elaborate. Thanks.
Something like the following? Say we use two untis of the cheper TP-Link TL-SG105E smart switch. If we use 1Gbps Fibre interner plan, It may become 1Gbps half duplex or 500Mbps full duplex, right?
Managed switch 1 (in DB Box) Trunk port 1 -- single Ethernet cable --> Managed Switch 2 (in living room) trunk port 1
Managed switch 1 LAN ports 3/4/5 (VLAN ID 200) --> patch panel --> Room LAN ports x 3
ONT --> Managed switch 1 WAN port 2 (VLAN ID 100)
Managed switch 2 WAN port 2 (VLAN ID 100) --> main router WAN port
Managed switch 2 LAN port 3/4/5 --Router LAN ports
Lazy to draw a proper picture, so I use a screenshot from a Chinese Youtube video.
![]()
Yes, essentially like this.
The trunk between both switches are still 1GbE full duplex. Since WAN traffic has to traverse from switch 1 to switch 2 before it reaches the router, depending on which switch your client is connected to, the traffic might end up going from switch 1, to switch 2, then back to switch 1, which amplifies the traffic that's carried by the trunk link.
Let's take your youtube screenshot as an example, if I'm connected to the AP that's connected to switch 1, anything that I pull from the internet will traverse from switch 1 to switch 2 before it reaches the router, where routing and NAT done, then the traffic will traverse back through the trunk link to switch 1, then finally to the AP where my phone/computer is connected.
So if I'm downloading a file at 1Gbps, the trunk link will see 1Gbps download and upload at the same time, which effectively saturates the gigabit trunk link.
There is a VLAN thread here which can be of good reference as well.
https://forums.hardwarezone.com.sg/threads/quick-primer-to-vlans.6648144/
Yes, non-issue for most regular people except for in very specific scenarios.Thanks for the detailed explanation.
So I see a potential problem (but not a big issue in practice), if the user is using one computer to download a file and then at the same time using another computer to upload a file, then both can not reach 1Gbps, as that will exceed the capability of the trunk link. But this should not really be a big issue in reality.
Is my understanding correct?
wait guys.... are we saying that there is a separate solution (3rd solution) to the hdb issue?
usually we will either do 2 routers or 1 router and pull another lan cable method.
but with the above diagram, we are saying that all we need is 1 router, 2 switches, and the router can be placed in the middle of the room and without the need to pull extra lan cable?
thanks alot xiaofan. it seems like option 3 is the cheapest of them lot. just wondering why it doesnt seems like a popular choice? is it because of the complexity of configuring the vlan setting in the switches coupled with the potential problem you highlighted earlier (although not exactly a big issue)?a) ONT in DB box --> Managed switch 1 (eg: TP-Link TL-SG108E smart switch)
b) Managed switch LAN Ports (VLAN ID 100) --> patch panel -- Room LAN ports
c) Managed switch 1 trunk port --> patch panel --> Living room LAN port --> Managed switch 2 trunk port (in the Living room, eg, another TL-SG108E, or TL-SG105E smart switch)
d) Managed switch 2 WAN port (VLAN ID 10) --> main wireless router WAN port (in the living room)
e) One of the main wireless router LAN ports --> one of the Managed switch 2 LAN port (VLAN ID 100)
f) If you are using Singtel ONT and Singtel TV box, just need to have one more VLAN ID 20 for the Singtel TV boxes.
![]()
thanks alot xiaofan. it seems like option 3 is the cheapest of them lot. just wondering why it doesnt seems like a popular choice? is it because of the complexity of configuring the vlan setting in the switches coupled with the potential problem you highlighted earlier (although not exactly a big issue)?
im one of those that dont quite understand the vlan diagram. what does "Vlan 10, Port 1-2 Tagged, Port 3-untag" means? do i have to 'do' something to them?