![]() ![]() Then Advanced tab/Setup/WAN Setup and changed WAN preference to 'Must use ethernet WAN, clicked apply then it restarted again. After several attempts I found it returned to the default password. First I manually installed the latest firmware from the Netgear website. ![]() I put in Australia, TPG and selected no configure my own settings as genie wouldn't work in my previous attempts. After it cycled back on I turned it off and I took the power out and waited a few minutes, plugged the ethernet cable into the red port named 'internet' and powered on. I plugged the modem into the power and pressed the reset button for 20 seconds. Yes the login details are the same as my login details for Post Office. TPG sent me a modem and it works however I would like to use my own. I checked and my bundle comes with a home phone that I don’t use or even own. I have an NBN 50 plan via HFC connection. The modem router uses the Internet port for an Ethernet The modem router uses the DSL port for a DSL WANĬonnection. Is DSL over the DSL port or Ethernet over the Internet port. The modem router automatically detects whether the WAN connection From the WAN Preference menu, select one of the following options: The user name and password are case-sensitive.Ħ. ![]() Enter the user name and password for the modem router. Launch a web browser from a computer or WiFi device that is connected to the network.ģ. To change the WAN connection preference:ġ. Only one WAN interface (either the DSL port or the Ethernet WAN port) can be active at any time. Note: The modem router does not support load balancing over ADSL and Ethernet WAN interfaces. However, you can also set the WAN connection preference manually to either the DSL port or the Ethernet WAN port. The modem router can autodetect the type of WAN connection. (Multiplexing,VPI,VCI are disabled) enable Internet interface only VLAN ID=2, Priority=0 Internet requires login then PPPoE, username with on end, password rest as shown in the screen shot (P63).Ĭhange the Physical WAN Connection Preference Set Country=Australia (if there) Provider=TPG or Other Transfer Mode=PTM DSL mode=VDSL2 Then Specify a VDSL Connection with a Login Requirement and PPPoE Service on P61. See the section Change the Physical WAN Connection Preference (copied below) to use the DSL port. I've taken this description from the guide.Ĭonnect a telephone cable from DSL port to telephone wall socket. Is there someone in the community that has experiance with this router and could support in getting it connected? With the manual setup failing we tried the Netgear Genie also trying different username/password combinations, if we select the option "no login details required" the router will sync but not connect. In one attempt I manually set the IP and DNS addresses from the working modemĭuring the manual setup I tried different combinations of our username or ) and password ("noPassword",, ).We started by taking all the settings from the working modem and using them as a guide to manually configure the D6400. We used this modem/router a couple of years back with another provider and as part of my troubleshooting this time around I upgraded its firmware from 1.0.0.88 to 1.0.0.102. Most newer routers, however, ship with the 10.0.0.0 block set as their default private network address space.I am having issues getting a Netgear D6400 to work with TPGs FTTN, the TPG supplied modem worked out of the box but I am keen to swap it over for the Netgear. If you have an older router it’s almost a guarantee that your router uses the 192.168.0.0 block, much less commonly the 172.16.0.0 block, and very rarely the 10.0.0.0 block. Home routers use one of three reserved “private address” blocks that are only used, the world over, for internal networks and are never assigned for use on the greater Internet. RELATED: Understanding Routers, Switches, and Network Hardware Inside the home network, however, there are dozens upon dozens of unique addresses. The world sees all the traffic from your home (regardless of the device you use) as coming from the IP address your ISP assigned you. To do so it assigned each item behind the router a unique address and then directs that traffic outward. The primary function of your router, above all else, is to router traffic between local devices and the greater Internet. ![]()
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