Forum Articles
  Welcome back Join CF
You are here You are here: Home | Forum | An almost "unique" networking problem

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most of the discussions, articles and other free features. By joining our Virgin Media community you will have full access to all discussions, be able to view and post threads, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own images/photos, and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please join our community today.


Welcome to Cable Forum
Go Back   Cable Forum > Computers & IT > Networking
Register FAQ Community Calendar

An almost "unique" networking problem
Closed Thread
 
Thread Tools
Old 05-11-2008, 02:26   #1
Turkey Machine
Inactive
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Norwich
Age: 37
Services: Company LLU internet, soon-to-be company FTTC internet at 56Mb/20Mb!
Posts: 1,895
Turkey Machine has reached the bronze age
Turkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze age
An almost "unique" networking problem

Greetings one and all.

I am in the lucky position of having 2 fully working (still) cable modems. Don't ask. I dunno why they both work either! Both provide internet access (one is 10Mbit down, 512Kbit up, the other is 2Mbit down, 200Kbit up), and both together should give me a theoretical 12Mbit downstream, 712Kbit upstream. I say *should*, because in reality, I can only use either one or the other.

I'd like to be able to use both at the same time, as this would help enormously when using BitTorrent, especially with the upload. However, I cannot figure out how! Currently, I have the 2Mbit service connected to a router which is providing a hardware firewall and is connected to my laptop via the ethernet LAN port. The 10Mbit service is connected to a Belkin F5D9230-4 wireless router, and is connected to my laptop via the onboard wireless card.

I have tried many ways of joining the 2 connections together, including using XP's software bridging, and but nothing appears to have worked. I am eager to get it working more as a technical exercise than anything else, regardless of the benefits it could bring. I have a Netgear WGR614v9 router kindly provided by Virgin Media when I signed up that is sitting idly by and waiting to be used if it is required!

Any help in this matter is appreciated!

Regards,

Turkey Machine
Turkey Machine is offline  
Advertisement
Old 05-11-2008, 03:05   #2
jrhnewark
cf.mega poster
 
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: London
Posts: 1,267
jrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of society
Re: An almost "unique" networking problem

Are you paying for both modems? If not, then I suppose it's not exactly correct to be on here advising you on how to make the best of it!

If you are, then you need a "bridging" router. I use that term because, frankly, I've made it up and I can't remember the real one.

Ideally it'd be a Cisco bit of it, but other companies do make much cheaper kit that will do load balancing across two connections and offer redundancy.

I can't really find a whole lot out there on Google - but that's what you need: a load balancing router.
jrhnewark is offline  
Old 05-11-2008, 03:09   #3
Turkey Machine
Inactive
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Norwich
Age: 37
Services: Company LLU internet, soon-to-be company FTTC internet at 56Mb/20Mb!
Posts: 1,895
Turkey Machine has reached the bronze age
Turkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze ageTurkey Machine has reached the bronze age
Re: An almost "unique" networking problem

Technical exercise, remember?

Do none of the commercial wireless routers offer the bridging capability then?
Turkey Machine is offline  
Old 05-11-2008, 03:49   #4
jrhnewark
cf.mega poster
 
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: London
Posts: 1,267
jrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of societyjrhnewark is a pillar of society
Re: An almost "unique" networking problem

Nah, they don't seem to - a couple of sites I had a look at through Google (I think I just typed "load balancing router") seemed to have discontinued the models they did.

I'm sure Netgear did one though, but it might not be particularly cheap.
jrhnewark is offline  
Old 05-11-2008, 07:26   #5
Maggy
The Invisible Woman
Cable Forum Team
 
Maggy's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: between Portsmouth and Southampton.
Age: 72
Services: VM XL TV,50 MB VM BB,VM landline, Tivo
Posts: 40,337
Maggy has a golden auraMaggy has a golden auraMaggy has a golden auraMaggy has a golden auraMaggy has a golden auraMaggy has a golden auraMaggy has a golden aura
Maggy has a golden auraMaggy has a golden auraMaggy has a golden auraMaggy has a golden auraMaggy has a golden auraMaggy has a golden auraMaggy has a golden auraMaggy has a golden auraMaggy has a golden auraMaggy has a golden aura
Re: An almost "unique" networking problem

However you obtained two working modems what you are proposing is technicaly theft.Cable Forum cannot support such activities nor encourage them.Therefore this thread will remain closed.
__________________
Hell is empty and all the devils are here. Shakespeare..
Maggy is offline  
Closed Thread


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 07:09.


Server: osmium.zmnt.uk
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
All Posts and Content are © Cable Forum