Forum Discussion
When can I JUST use TM internet modem as ONLY a modem, in BRIDGE mode, with NO NAT, NO firewall, and frankly NO Wifi.
PLEASE let me know when can get a PLAIN modem from T-Mobile, or BUY my own modem, or SET their modem up to DUPLICATE the functionality of Spectrum. I can't and won't change, until and unless I can get that kind of service. Frankly, I am shocked that TM didn't spec that into their design. Instead, based on about a 20 minute search, that is IMPOSSIBLE today… and here are just a few of the problems that will prevent me from even considering TM:
- There’s NO bridge mode --- This means I CAN NEVER treat TM device like my Spectrum cable modem, and treat it JUST like a modem.
- Since I can’t treat it as just another modem, I have to REDO and RETHINK, and REDESIGN my whole network, to adopt to their design -- This is NOT going to happen!
- No Bridge means that I’m limited to whatever they designed into their modem, to provide services like DHCP, NAT, port forwarding, DNS, ETC.
- Since their software UI is the only way I can provide services I depend on, then unless they perfected their software, their UI, and their firmware, and their firewall software that is better than all the other devices I have, some of which are extremely sophisticated and expensive, their device makes using these devices not only redundant, but also DISABLED services, without a lot of workarounds, assuming I both want to do the work, and I can actually achieve configs that work for me.
I'm still using Spectrum, and it appears I won't have a viable good option of changing everything over to T-Mobile, until they somehow figure out how to produce a service that is COMPLETE plug and play with a CABLE MODEM…. By modem, I do NOT mean a firewall, a router, a WiFi, or ANYTHING more than a stable MODEM with ONE IP address, DHCP in order to pass an IP to my firewall, and that's it. NO, I do NOT even need DNS services, either.
I hope I just misunderstand the current TM design. If this is how it works today, it reminds me of when I first put a DSL modem in my company in the early 1990's. The first thing they gave me was a contract that said I had to PAY EXTRA, for EACH device I connected, I'd have to notify them in advance, and EACH IP was extra cost. After I rewrote their contract, and informed them I only wanted ONE device connected, and ONE IP, and bought my SonicWall "Internet gateway" "NAT Firewall", and "DHCP server". Although that one device was about $300-400 at the time, we were able to use that to service over 50 computers at a time for the next 15 years. I guess we were ahead of our time as a small company. Most everyone else was paying 10-15 per user, and we never EVER paid for more than ONE user. But then, we had 20 or more engineers working for us at the time as well.
C'mon T-Mobile --- Get a real great network designer involved so it only takes plugging my EXISTING 1,000-T WIRED internet cable and then everything works, out of the box. Then, also provide the means to MANAGE and MONITOR that modem remotely. That's all I need or want, and suspect that is all most all users want today..
- JohnRSNewbie Caller
Not having Bridge Mode is a PITA for me. I need control over the DHCP to set the subnet and fixed IP's. The old ASK gateway provides this.
Early on the ASK's had a problem with IPv6 over WiFi. After a half-year of T-Mobile Engineering saying there was nothing wrong with it, they finally admitted it and fixed it. But for a while I tried a Nokia. It seemed to be a fine for WiFi setups and nothing else. But the cell signal dropped 2 bars and was often unusable. After going through 4 of them (one was DOA), I found that it locked to the LOWER level signal (happened to the the 5G) and ignored the stronger LTE. Engineering was totally clueless, like usual.
So I went back to the ASK. Fortunately they had finally (it took over a year) fixed the IPv6 WiFi problem. So I was happy. But it's no longer supported. They can't even send me a replacement battery for it now.
I haven't tried it, but wonder if this might get around the missing Bridge Mode: Use your own router which also supports a VPN for you LAN. This way the TM gateway would only see the router. You would probably lose IPv6, however, since most VPNs still don't support it.
Note: The 3rd generation gateway is just as dumb as the 2nd gen Nokia. A support person tried to get me to switch to it, saying that it did support DHCP but I downloaded the manual and it doesn’t.
Note: Mullvad VPN doesn support IPv6 and it runs WireGuard which shouldn’t be too had to set up on a good router.
- ktiedtNetwork Novice
Zeek the Geek wrote:
I just found this information regarding the soon-to-be released new T-Mobile modem…..
https://tmo.report/2021/10/exclusive-this-might-be-the-new-t-mobile-home-internet-gateway/
Just as useless unfortunately… no bridge mode, uPnP, DMZ, or port forwarding. You can separate wifi into 2 SSID (2.4 and 5Ghz) and change the SSID and passwords, but that's quite literally the extent of it.
Was not able to plug into my existing router without jumping through hoops. - Zeek_the_GeekNetwork Novice
I just found this information regarding the soon-to-be released new T-Mobile modem…..
https://tmo.report/2021/10/exclusive-this-might-be-the-new-t-mobile-home-internet-gateway/
- Zeek_the_GeekNetwork Novice
When I was complaining recently to TMo support that without Port Forwarding and support for Port 6767 I could not use the IP Phone system I had just installed the Rep told me there is a new, second generation router to be released in the first or second quarter of 2022 and that she believed it would allow Port Forwarding. So I am waiting and checking the media for announcements of the new router. I am also going to see if Verizon Wireless is serving my market and if they can meet my needs.
- JCAGBNewbie Caller
To the average TMHI customer, double NAT is not going to be required. Most users will put the trashcan up, take down their old ISP provided combo modem / router device and run the same way they did with their previous ISP. Hell, most home internet users don't even have the motivation to change the Wi-Fi password provided by the ISP installer when their home internet was originally setup. They just write down the 20 character complex password and stick it to the refrigerator with a magnet. When visitors need internet access, they just give them the password.
As for me, I am an IT professional, and I do work from a home office, but I have no need for port forwarding. However, I do want to manage my DHCP / DNS, and have an isolated guest network. To do so, I have do use double NAT. I have no problem with that. The performance of my TMHI is still better than what i was getting form Spectrum, for 20% less cost. Couple that with the fact that I am unlikely to see a yearly price increase as long as I stay on my existing plan, and it is a win-win. Now, I may be the exception in the IT world, and the fact that I am close enough to a tower to get high through-put has probably influenced my decision.
For those who have a complex setup requiring port forwarding and D-DNS, this setup is probably not for you. I mean, you probably would not run your home network off of a cell phone either. The tech is basically the same. There are limitations with cellular service that just cannot be overcome.
Just realize, that for 90% of T-Mobile Internet customers, this system, as it is, will be more than adequate.
- mlschlafNewbie Caller
I'm hanging an ASUS router off of the 5g gateway and am not seeing any problems. Including playing online game. Haven't seen it here yet but 1 possible work around is a VPN. VPN services can be had pretty cheap. I specifically bought the router that could support a VPN client.
- jswadeNetwork Novice
extremetm wrote:
Bridge mode, double NAT and all the rest has been talked about her ad nauseum. We all know it sucks and T-Mobile is fully aware of our frustration. Just about every week a new user comes here to complain. The can is dumbed-down for sure. Designed for the non-technical plug and play.
For me it's an irritant but not worth staying with Spectrum. Not even close. Their constant price increases are offensive. Would never consider going back to that company.
For $50 a month I get great speed, better than Spectrum was and reliable service. I'm in Dallas so I'm sure that helps. I've found workarounds for the port forwarding and the rest. Hopefully these limitations are temporary.
I agree with everything you've said. Double NAT isn't ideal, but it's what we have to live with in today's IPV4 world. I'm also in Dallas with great speeds (320/45 or thereabout). Can't complain for $50.
- DaaBossTransmission Trainee
Y--- Evidently, the fiber person that was in charge of "Fi"? at Google moved over to TuCows, and they are intending to go after that market. I was studying TuCows, who got heavily into the domain name business, and has bought several companies in that space. If you remember, they were hosting most every applications in the world many years ago. They could become a force. He's been fighting against Network Solutions' horrible business practices for years. (SEE their Wikipedia article to read about just how bad they have been and still are.) This cancel Culture must stop, and he may be a force that accelerates that effort. (NWS and separately, GoDaddy have already decided that some companies should not exist, and ERASED them from the internet.) I'd strongly suggest a boycott of any company that practices cancelling anyone for other than really heinous reasons. If not, eventually they will come to erase you too, and in the mean time, you will have lost freedom of choice and speech.
It would be nice to have some new entrants into that market. Elon Musk is also talking about putting up a ton of small satellites to provide cell and internet service, worldwide. Just watch, to say that these leaders of today, Amazon, FB, Twit, Google et al can't be replaced hasn't been in the computer business for "very long". Eventually, they too (most of them), will disappear as well, for hurting their customers, lousy products, or overpriced bunk. Replace NASA? Sure, that's impossible. Disrupters rule, at least the great ones will, eventually.
- NetArc513Newbie Caller
I agree with what you're saying. Work from home/remote is becoming a standard, for better or for worse, and we're already running into issues with that. This is particularly the case with some users in the sticks who want to work off of Hughes Net satellite internet. To state the obvious: most of them end up coming on-site in the end lol
I will likely end up back with Spectrum, at least for some period. The reality for now is that I only need a temporary, cheaper, hold-over until I move here in the next couple of months. I wanted to give Spectrum the middle finger as long as possible due to price gouging since they're the only "Real" ISP that can service over 50mpbs to my current address. Hopefully the other ISP in my area will have fiber availability to my new condo here soon and I can pit them against each other finally.
- DaaBossTransmission Trainee
I've done the research now, and have concluded that this is definitely not ready for prime time. Not only that, but I've concluded that TM is sadly only going to cater to low end users. IF TM is going to go after networking and the ISP market, then it will fail unless it is also fully supports the "business office environment". Where is that located today?? Most employees' offices are no longer in an office building. Call their office, and you'll find that it is really located in their home, and not down a long hallway.
Call most business's main office number, and instead of a PBX, you will most often reach that person's cell phone-- their PERSONAL cell phone. Businesses are moving most all their workers to work offsite, and much of that "branch office", is really at the employee's home. or where ever they happen to be at that time. So, if our cell phones are now acting in the role of the extension at my office, it is ALSO my business phone.
What about the "company LAN" or our shared apps, shared data, and security? That too is being replaced in teh cloud so it will increasingly not matter, where the physical office is located. Google WorkSpace which we use as a small company, is also now scaled up to handle thousands of employees. So, now our "company network" is not behind a firewall as it was years ago. The engineers at Google really do know what they are doing for enterprise customers. We had to migrate our "network instance" to a large company, and that only took our IT staffs an hour, with Google's help to implement the transfer.
Recently, I had to work with troubleshooting significant problems with a 5 year old ARRIS cable modem, remotely from 100 miles away. THIS IS a "consumer product", and I'm going to reverse my stance and say that most all vendors that are providing services for consumers and companies ARE providing FULLY ALL the features for both styles of customers. It's the only strategy that makes sense. And, instead of less capabilities, there are significantly more options and capabilities in all the new modems. They are all ready and capable, and designed specifically so the identical hardware can front end a $20,000 Cisco router, or my XBox and Roku. And in today's market, TM is planning on eliminating "business use"?? Most homes ARE GOING to be all types -- SOHO, SMB and enterprise offices, as well as homes. Those that are not, will become fewer and fewer.
Even though this ARRIS device I was troubleshooting appeared to be defective, from the consumer's side I was able to use their PC to configure more than most commercial routers, and this was as it designed over five years ago. Likewise, many of the detailed logs are available to the users and even more detailed logs and configurations are available to Spectrum, remotely. I found their support engineers, and we could both work on that device together, remotely. We both could see that in the past week, this was going on and offline about every two minutes. We also determined that the problem was likely the wiring, and not the modem. No guessing in the dark, the on-site techs had to rewire a fair amount of connectors, both inside and outside the house. Then, perfect internet
At this point, I really can't justify wasting my time redoing things another way, just because TM is too stubborn to provide a device that could be used in business OR home use. You can always hide features, but you sure can't add them if they don't exist. ADD PASS THROUGH and BRIDGE MODE!
I have a number of calls from the "business reps" at TM. Here's some of the things I will report: When providing a new service or new hardware, you are choosing to not only cripple the devices as you've done with the modem, but you've also chosen to not even allow pass-through to work. That means that your new devices and services are specifically designed so that they can't possibly work in a business environment. Even your old obsolete "Cell Spot Wifi Router" designed by NetGear, had bridge mode where I could use it as a pass through, or as a Wifi dumb target within a LAN, (which I am still doing today). You can easily add a UI "dumb mode" for users that might cause more service config problems, and that will keep it simple for them, while providing an advanced mode for regular users.
I'd also talk to them about TM's DIGITS initiative. It too, seems like it had a great start to provide a means for a SOHO business with a cloud based Mini-PBX. Instead, it appears the product was abandoned… Not only is there no further development, even what they did release, cannot be used. The Android app hasn't had an update in years--That said, the app actually stays logged in and mostly works, although synchronization between the app and the phones doesn't work reliably. PC's --- Both the installed DIGITS app, and the web based version of Digits is a joke. Both log out after 20 minutes, and can only be logged back in with a new text message code, sent to your regular cell phone. Whoops… To me, these are rather glaring problems that won't ever be solved and brought up to business standards.
I was really bullish on TM providing inexpensive ISP services. but someone that is a strategist must get involved or TM will fail, and us users with them. I'll have to stay with Spectrum for now, even if it costs more $$. Overall with my time, it is a much better and less costly.
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