This means that, as noted earlier, clients connected to your DD-WRT repeater must be inside their own subnet, preventing them from seeing clients connected to the host AP.įor example, if your host AP assigns clients to the 192.168.0.x subnet, your wireless repeater will have to assign its clients to another non-overlapping private subnet, such as 10.0.0.x. This also means you may run into problems with the limitations of wireless repeater mode, and there are some.Īt the time of this writing, wireless repeater mode does not yet function in bridged mode. Wireless repeater mode also groups your local clients into their own subnet – a potential feature (for privacy) or a potential hassle (for LAN routing), depending on your needs.īecause wireless repeater mode is a new feature, and technically still in beta, using it puts you on the leading edge of DD-WRT technology. In a test case, I successfully repeated a host AP with a signal strength of only 9% as seen by the DD-WRT router – so low that the host AP wasn’t detected at all by a laptop’s integrated wireless. Unlike a WDS, your DD-WRT router can now receive and redistribute a wireless signal from a generic AP.Typically, you would use wireless repeater mode to rebroadcast a signal too weak for your wireless clients to pick up reliably – assuming that your DD-WRT router can pick up the host AP, of course. Thanks to the new V24 beta firmware, a single DD-WRT router can be set up as a wireless repeater. In the real world, you might own only one router which can run DD-WRT.
For the most reliable results, each router should be the same model running the same firmware. At a minimum, each router in the network must support WDS.
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In fact, we earlier demonstrated precisely how to do it our second DD-WRT tutorial. Setting up a WDS is a perfectly respectable thing to do. But those days are gone – and by “those days,” I mean 2006. In the old days, when you wanted to extend the range of a wireless access point, you had to set up a WDS, or wireless distribution system, coordinating two or more WDS-capable routers. DD-WRT Tutorial 2: Extend Range with WDS.DD-WRT Tutorial 3: Building a Wireless Bridge.DD-WRT Tutorial 4: Defining Priorities with QoS.Extend your range by turning a router into a Wi-Fi signal repeater - it will even work as you move from WLAN to WLAN.