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Random IP that is not in the range being assigned on network, also saying no DSL connection, for fiber

Ice_BuNNy

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Hey guys,

So We recently moved and were we stay we all share the same Network. Now this is not an issue myself and my family are the heavy users for it, so no real speed dips however,
we get this random Error when sometimes connecting to the wifi, were it takes you to a sign in page and states there is no DSL connection.
I have noticed the IP is not in the normal range, something like 192.x.x.5 where as the range is 10.0.0.x,

there are 3 routers setup (I only did mine) that all come from one Router, however each router has it's own wifi setup.
This happens for everyone.
any ideas on this?
 
Hey guys,

So We recently moved and were we stay we all share the same Network. Now this is not an issue myself and my family are the heavy users for it, so no real speed dips however,
we get this random Error when sometimes connecting to the wifi, were it takes you to a sign in page and states there is no DSL connection.
I have noticed the IP is not in the normal range, something like 192.x.x.5 where as the range is 10.0.0.x,

there are 3 routers setup (I only did mine) that all come from one Router, however each router has it's own wifi setup.
This happens for everyone.
any ideas on this?
What is your ip range for the wan router? Also check what the other two routers ip range is
 
You are probably seeing a response from an upstream routing device. Run a traceroute to determine hops. It should timeout at a point and will be the device in front of the last hop or firewall
 
DHCP is set up on the other routers. Let the WAN router do the DHCP and the other routers configure as an AP/DHCP clients
 
DHCP is set up on the other routers. Let the WAN router do the DHCP and the other routers configure as an AP/DHCP clients
^^ this

One or more of the other routers has DHCP active (there should only be one router on the local network with DHCP active)

It is good practice to manually assign fixed IP addresses to the other routers acting as access points, check the range of the router doing the DHCP assignments, and assign numbers above it's assignment range so that they won't conflict.
 

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