Forum Discussion
NAT (Forwarding) in T-Mobile Gateway
I recently signed up for T-Mobile internet, and I am VERY disappointed that I could not even forward NAT traffic to my home security system. I saw that this was discussed 7 months ago in a previous thread, and hope the developers will notice this. The speed is great, and the same as was advertised in the chat.
I would like this issue to be resolved so that I don’t need to continue with Optimum (Morris Broadband).
- CarSmartNetwork Novice
I use smarthing hub mesh system with 6 hubs places around home. I was using xfinity before and tmobile now. This uses the Plume technology and yours may be different mine but it does work
- Jackson300zxNetwork Novice
Not sure if anyone answered this exactly yet.....But, sounds like you can port forward. What you need to do is switch over to a business account. The monthy cost is the same, but you have to add $5 per month for a static IP address and also get their FX2000 modem. Then you can port forward. I have not tested it yet, I literally just ordered it.
Servicio:
https://www.t-mobile.com/business/solutions/business-internet-services/small-business-internet - mrbintxNetwork Novice
Thanks for the responses.
I ended up taking the SmartThings hub to my current home (where I have Frontier FIOS service) and I got the SmartThings hub online there. I then moved the hub to my new home (T-Mobile 5G service) and connected it via Ethernet to the modem. It came online and has been working well. It appears the issue is only with the initial registration.
- CarSmartNetwork Novice
Thanks for the update, I ordered one too. Not sure what I am getting but it is coming. Will update when it arrives
- tjwang668Network Novice
Jackson300zx wrote:
Not sure if anyone answered this exactly yet.....But, sounds like you can port forward. What you need to do is switch over to a business account. The monthy cost is the same, but you have to add $5 per month for a static IP address and also get their FX2000 modem. Then you can port forward. I have not tested it yet, I literally just ordered it.
Servicio:
https://www.t-mobile.com/business/solutions/business-internet-services/small-business-internet@Jackson300zx: Just to follow up if you have successfully tested the NAT and Port-forwarding features of inseego FX2000 gateway. I talked to T-mobile rep about this and she told me that
Small Business Internet (SBI):
Gateway: Nokia 5G21 and Arcadyan KVD21
Note: Static IP eligibility - Not IncludedBusiness Internet (BI)
Gateway:
• Nokia 5G21
• Inseego FX2000
• BYOD (Bring your own device)
Note: Static IP eligible (Inseego only)Only BI can ask for static IP, not SBI
- CarSmartNetwork Novice
So you can learn from my mistakes. First you will need a reason to switch to a business account, it is not unlimited data. Comes with 100 for 50 and 300 for 70/month. Can I do port forwarding? Don't know yet but will post the results
- tjwang668Network Novice
@carSmart: Actually, I already successfully opened a small business account with unlimited data for $50/month with TMO by using my EIN (TMO allows SBA under your SSN but because I already have a TMO family plan under my SSN and I don’t want to convert my family plan to biz plan) and got inseego FX2000 gateway (after several phone calls to the right department) and tried it out.
I configured gateway port-forwarding for my security camera system, however, it seemed only working when my iPone connected to LAN. When I tried to view my camera remotely from work, either connected to work WiFi or TMO network, I was unable to view them at all. I think it was not just simply port-fowarding issue, TMO might block port-access request in the front end.
TMO also blocked access to some websites due to their contents or securities.
I also found speeds of FX2000 unstable. Speed of ethernet gave 200Mbps and above, while 5G WiFi speed went down to 10Mbps and 2,4G WiFi speed went down to 10Mpbs, both WiFi speed changed frequently, unless I placed the gateway next to my computer. I have very strong TMO 5G coverage in my area. FX2000 came without external antenna, which I think that was the reason and T-mobile should provide external antenna to FX2000 users.
Anyway, after trying it for a week, I decided to cancel it and stayed with ATT U-verse.
I will re-consider TMO internet once it can offer bridge-mode on their gateway. At this monent, it just couldn't meet my requirement.
- wase4711Network Novice
CarSmart wrote:
So you can learn from my mistakes. First you will need a reason to switch to a business account, it is not unlimited data. Comes with 100 for 50 and 300 for 70/month. Can I do port forwarding? Don't know yet but will post the results
it comes with unlimited data, at least on my plan it does
- BirdieShotzNetwork Novice
I've been monitoring this thread for a year or so for the same issues. In my case I needed to get my webserver to allow incoming traffic from outside T-Mobile Home Internet to preview development sites.
Long story short, if you've got a similar use case, Tailscale did the trick for me. Installed the webserver as a VM on a Synology NAS, and Tailscale has a package that can be run on DSM. I add development site subdomains to public DNS and route to the tailscale address using an A record. Then I share the webserver tailscale node with whoever I want to preview the site, they connect to tailscale, type in the domain, and it works pretty great. Won't solve all issues I know….
For local development, I use VirtualMin and configure the primary IP address as the tailscale address, and I add the local address to the site-enabled entries in Apache and my hosts file. Takes a little configuring but I plan to post some steps on how in time. I added a quick article for now on my blog. Hope this helps somebody 🤷♂️
- stevenclark612Network Novice
- You static ip the PC. 2) Use TCP View to find ports and ip addresses used by app. 3) Open on PC Firewall or Endpoint. 4) Open or port forward ports. 5)Test
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