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Sledneck55
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Re: This is why Bridge/Passthrough is not an option.
I found a third party device that does pass the public ip address but again it's a shared address with other TMHI devices in the area. Your IMEI number is your WAN address in theory. Yeacomm devices are configurable andcan be put in bridge mode. They call it "work" mode in their gui. Expensive on the Jungle site. My issue with the device was it has an Omni antenna and it picks the strongest signal to me. It also band locks. The strongest tower to me 1.75 miles away but it's the most congested. Another tower 2.8 miles from me with less traffic and better speeds. I went back to my KVD21 with a 2X2 mimo antenna and I have faster speeds and a more stable connection. Waveform antennas are great. T-Mobiles new deviceallows for external antennas. The KVD21 has to be modified. I helped my neighbor with his setup. To avoid the double NAT and possible latency issues, just use the T-Mobile gateway to handle the DHCP and use a mesh system to extend the WiFi coverage in your home. I can't do that because all of my networking equipment is prosumer. Unifi.27Visto0likes0ComentariosThis is why Bridge/Passthrough is not an option.
We all want configurability, passthrough/bridge mode to use our own routers avoiding the dreaded double NAT that can effect network performance. The problem is not with T-mobiles gateway's. It has to do with the network. All of the home and business gateways don't get their own public IP address. Users in an area are sharingone publicIP address. Unless T-Mobile will allow for static IP addresses is why these gateways have limited configuration options. Im notsure if its an option. I haven't called tech support to ask if a static IP is available. Thisis why you will see slow downs at peak usage times. In layman's terms, picture 10 devices on your home network all streaming 4K video with a 150MBPS connection, it can't handle that much bandwidth. Same goes for the T-mobile home internet modem/router but the problem is your sharing theconnectionwith multiple Home internet customers. If you have a cable, fiber or a DSL connection you do in fact get your own public IP address. Cable connection is the is lets say a2" pipe and everyone is feeding their 1/2" pipe. Slow downs happen at peak usage. DSL is limited to the copper infrastructure as far as the amount of bandwidth it can provide along with the distance from the central office (CO). Fiber is different That is why you can get full duplex speeds (same up/down) because a light signal doesn't degrade as much. Very rare that you get slow downs with fiber. There is optional devices from other companies that will get rid of the DHCP which causes network and double NAT issues but the fact still remains you're still sharing one public IP address with multiple clients. I hope this makes sense to some people.3.5KViews2likes3Comentarios