Jump to content

Official Airave 4 LTE / Casa Pebble / Airave 3 LTE / S1000 Thread


SeanK_

Recommended Posts

I think SeanK was looking to see what the blavk ethernet cord plugged into the netgear not the bottom. If your switch does not have enough ports you may need a bigger one.

lilotimz i think is guessing the black wire goes to the airave is plugged into the netgear. But the netgear you have to pay for a new ip on each port. So if you pay one ip then it will go to the white wire until it is off then go to the black wire.(guessing white ethernet wire eero and black ethernet wire airave plugged into netgear)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My setup:

I placed the modem -> Airave

modem -> eero -> switch -> which has multiple computers/Xbox/Hue hub connected

I had to remove the Airave from the eero network because it wouldn't work, but does work with the modem. I didn't bridge my modem since eero doesn't suppose PPPoE yet.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, SeanK_ said:

My setup:

I placed the modem -> Airave

modem -> eero -> switch -> which has multiple computers/Xbox/Hue hub connected

I had to remove the Airave from the eero network because it wouldn't work, but does work with the modem. I didn't bridge my modem since eero doesn't suppose PPPoE yet.

L-net and LTE never went green. So I can try blocking the Airave from the Eero network?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, jtrotter54 said:

L-net and LTE never went green. So I can try blocking the Airave from the Eero network?

Did you try plugging the Airave to the ethernet ports on the modem and see, while still having the eero hand the other network? You will want to do a factory reset to the Airave just in case so it can activate.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

No no no! 

Ok, look at my setup. https://imgur.com/yxvJBZr This is how I got this figured out.

I want you to do this.

Modem has 4 ethernet ports, plug the airave into the first port with the black cable, now plug the eero into the second port with the white cable, now the eero has an extra port, plug the ethernet cable to the switch yellow cable, then the blue and yellow cable for the tv/tivo can be connect to the switch.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

23 minutes ago, SeanK_ said:

No no no! 

Ok, look at my setup. https://imgur.com/yxvJBZr This is how I got this figured out.

I want you to do this.

Modem has 4 ethernet ports, plug the airave into the first port with the black cable, now plug the eero into the second port with the white cable, now the eero has an extra port, plug the ethernet cable to the switch yellow cable, then the blue and yellow cable for the tv/tivo can be connect to the switch.

That won't work unless he has multiple static IP addresses.

The A4 itself will need 2 IP addresses. One for the CDMA network and one for the LTE network. It needs to be placed behind a router in a typical setup and a CM1200 is not one as it's strictly a D3.1 modem with multiple GBe ports. 

The Eero may need to be modified to do port forwarding and in the worst case scenario may need to place the A4 into a DMZ net. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Odd because mine does and I don't have multiple static IPs. [emoji848]
Do you have a CM1200 modem or a modem + router + access point combination unit (gateway)?



Sent from my Pixel 3 using Tapatalk

Link to comment
Share on other sites

11 hours ago, lilotimz said:

Do you have a CM1200 modem or a modem + router + access point combination unit (gateway)?



Sent from my Pixel 3 using Tapatalk
 

Modem/router combo, but I disabled all the router part and have the eero do all the work.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 hours ago, lilotimz said:

That won't work unless he has multiple static IP addresses.

The A4 itself will need 2 IP addresses. One for the CDMA network and one for the LTE network. It needs to be placed behind a router in a typical setup and a CM1200 is not one as it's strictly a D3.1 modem with multiple GBe ports. 

The Eero may need to be modified to do port forwarding and in the worst case scenario may need to place the A4 into a DMZ net. 

@SeanK_ I did a similar combination before (can't remember which went into the modem first). However, I'll try it again with the A4 plugged in first. Last time, It seemed like the Eero and A4 fought over the internet access because when the internet went down, the A4 started to gain lights (again, everything but Lnet and LTE). @lilotimzAny other suggestions? You mentioned port forwarding or DMZ net?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 minutes ago, SeanK_ said:

Port forwarding:

Open UDP ports 53, 67, 500 and 4500 bi-directionally

How do you port forward on the Eero

 

10 minutes ago, SeanK_ said:

Port forwarding:

Open UDP ports 53, 67, 500 and 4500 bi-directionally

Ok dumb question how do I that

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ok dumb question how do I that

You shouldn't need to port forward. And in fact, you can't with the 4. It's assigned two IP addresses, one for LTE and one for CDMA. Both use all of those ports, and you can only forward to one IP.    

 

 

I hate that Sprint gave that forwarding advice. It may break other things (53 is DNS and 68 is DHCP). What they meant to say was make sure that those 4 ports aren't blocked outbound on your firewall. Which unless you're on an enterprise, corporate, or public network, they won't be. You would have had to explicitly block them. Outbound on those ports is always allowed by default.

 

Sent from my Pixel 3 XL using Tapatalk

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

28 minutes ago, ingenium said:

You shouldn't need to port forward. And in fact, you can't with the 4. It's assigned two IP addresses, one for LTE and one for CDMA. Both use all of those ports, and you can only forward to one IP.    

 

 

I hate that Sprint gave that forwarding advice. It may break other things (53 is DNS and 68 is DHCP). What they meant to say was make sure that those 4 ports aren't blocked outbound on your firewall. Which unless you're on an enterprise, corporate, or public network, they won't be. You would have had to explicitly block them. Outbound on those ports is always allowed by default.

 

Sent from my Pixel 3 XL using Tapatalk

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Well I tried @SeanK_ setup and it didn't work. Only WAN stayed green. The closest I've gotten was plugging the A4 before the eero into the switch all lights except for lnet and lte went green. Any suggestions? Should I delete those port forward rules?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well I tried [mention=14486]SeanK_[/mention] setup and it didn't work. Only WAN stayed green. The closest I've gotten was plugging the A4 before the eero into the switch all lights except for lnet and lte went green. Any suggestions? Should I delete those port forward rules?
We'd need to see how the Eero software is configured. It just seems like something isn't right with your setup, and I'm not sure what it is. Can you post the IP addresses of a few devices connected to the switch? Just to make sure that everything is getting a local IP.

I would delete the forwards. What IP are you forwarding them to? Remember the Airave 4 has two IPs, so either way you'd only be able to forward to either CDMA or LTE, not both. They each use an independent ipsec tunnel using ports 500 and 4500. So at best the forwards would only work for one.

Sent from my Pixel 3 XL using Tapatalk

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 9/6/2019 at 11:07 AM, ingenium said:

We'd need to see how the Eero software is configured. It just seems like something isn't right with your setup, and I'm not sure what it is. Can you post the IP addresses of a few devices connected to the switch? Just to make sure that everything is getting a local IP.

I would delete the forwards. What IP are you forwarding them to? Remember the Airave 4 has two IPs, so either way you'd only be able to forward to either CDMA or LTE, not both. They each use an independent ipsec tunnel using ports 500 and 4500. So at best the forwards would only work for one.

Sent from my Pixel 3 XL using Tapatalk

Screenshots of the port forward setup  can be seen in the link below.

http://imgur.com/a/cpj4mlJ

How can I easily get the IPs of the devices connected to the switch?

Thank you!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[mention=21091]ingenium[/mention] or anyone else, i really dont want to give up, i get no reception in my house....any suggestions?

Factory reset your Eero and redo everything from the ground up is what I'll say.

 

Something about the eeros current configuration is blocking the A4 and just doing these Config edits are not helping much.

 

So factory reset it to the basics and make sure the A4 works with that. Then slowly add custom settings and rules while ensuring the A4 is operational.

 

 

Sent from my Pixel 3 using Tapatalk

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[mention=21091]ingenium[/mention] or anyone else, i really dont want to give up, i get no reception in my house....any suggestions?
It's hard to make further suggestions without being able to play with your router directly and see exactly what settings are enabled and disabled, or getting a packet capture to see what's happening. Lilotimz's suggestion is probably your best bet for now.

Sent from my Pixel 3 XL using Tapatalk

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


  • large.unreadcontent.png.6ef00db54e758d06

  • gallery_1_23_9202.png

  • Similar Content

  • Posts

    • In the conference call they had two question on additional spectrum. One was the 800 spectrum. They are not certain what will happen, thus have not really put it into their plans either way (sale or no sale). The do have a reserve level. It is seen as great for new technologies which I presume is IOT or 5g slices.  They did not bite on use of their c-band or DOD.  mmWave rapidly approaching deadlines not mentioned at all. FWA brushes on this as it deals with underutilized spectrum on a sector by sector basis.  They are willing to take more money to allow FWA to be mobile (think RV or camping). Unsure if this represents a higher priority, for example, RVs in Walmart parking lots where mobile needs all the capacity. In terms of FWA capacity, their offload strategy is fiber through joint ventures where T-Mobile does the marketing, sales, and customer support while the fiber company does the network planning and installation.  50%-50% financial split not being consolidated into their books. I think discussion of other spectrum would have diluted the fiber joint venture discussion. They do have a fund which one use is to purchase new spectrum. Sale of the 800Mhz would go into this. It should be noted that they continue to buy 2.5Ghz spectrum from schools etc to replace leases. They will have a conference this fall  to update their overall strategies. Other notes from the call are 75% of the phones on the network are 5g. About 85% of their sites have n41, n25, and n71. 93% of traffic is on midband.  SA is also adding to their performance advantage, which they figure is still ahead of other carriers by two years. It took two weeks to put the auction 108 spectrum to use at their existing sites. Mention was also made that their site spacing was designed for midrange thus no gaps in n41 coverage, while competitors was designed for lowband thus toggles back and forth for n77.  
    • The manual network selection sounds like it isn't always scanning NR, hence Dish not showing up. Your easiest way to force Dish is going to be forcing the phone into NR-only mode (*#*#4636#*#* menu?), since rainbow sims don't support SA on T-Mobile.
    • "The company’s unique multi-layer approach to 5G, with dedicated standalone 5G deployed nationwide across 600MHz, 1.9GHz, and 2.5GHz delivers customers a consistently strong experience, with 85% of 5G traffic on sites with all three spectrum bands deployed." Meanwhile they are very close to a construction deadline in June for 850Mhz of mmWave in most of Ohio iirc. No reported sightings.
    • T-Mobile Delivers Industry-Leading Customer, Service Revenue and Profitability Growth in Q1 2024, and Raises 2024 Guidance https://www.t-mobile.com/news/business/t-mobile-q1-2024-earnings — — — — — I find it funny that when they talk about their spectrum layers they're saying n71, n25, and n41. They're completely avoiding talking about mmWave.
    • Was true in my market. Likely means a higher percentage of 5g phones in your market.
  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...