on 19-01-2016 22:30
I have currently just had virgin out into my address and to my dismay I have found I can not change my internal ip address for the network in the superhub 3. I have always detested using default setting in any router I have bought or have used. I have my whole network manually set with ip addresses, I don't like using the range 192.168.*.* is there anyway of changing the setting to match all of my already set ip addresses across my network?
many thanks
on 24-08-2018 10:05
on 24-08-2018 10:12
@Sephiroth wrote:
Look at the difference between your screen and Horsey's screen and that's what you change.....
Eiuuuuu! - don’t change CPE’s or LEASE and 192.168.0.xxx becomes 192.168.2.xxx. (Viz “xxx” the 4th low order octet of decimal address stays the same!)
Errr 2nd box in from the RIGHT ONLY perhaps?
Lesson for me: “brevis esse laboro, obscurus fio “ so never assume an user that want’s to change their subnet actually knows what they’re doing (or why they’re doing it? “Need it for work” is not descriptive of requirement or purpose for change in any useful context! )
on 24-08-2018 10:13
That's brilliant, thank you.
Does this change the IP address that is the IP address of the super hub that is location detectable? or the IP address that your devices around your home log into?
Regards
JD
on 24-08-2018 10:24
It seems that it's not possible to have a subnet of 192.168.1.X
Is that the case?
If so, what a steaming pos the SH3 truly is.
Stephen.
on 24-08-2018 11:48
@Engineer1 wrote:It seems that it's not possible to have a subnet of 192.168.1.X
Is that the case?
If so, what a steaming pos the SH3 truly is.
Stephen.
The reason for this is that, without intelligent foresight, VM assign the guest WiFi network to the 192.168.1.1 range. So it is a reserved range.
That will **bleep** off all those moving to VM with static IP devices in the 192.168.1.x range!
on 24-08-2018 11:57
Yes indeed. I am very much bleeping bleeped off.
What a nonsense decision someone made. Presumably someone who doesn't know SH** about bleep is responsible for this bleepwitted situation.
Stephen
on 24-08-2018 12:15
Well I suppose, from a VM point of view, the less users can do with the Hub, the better. If it was an "open" Router, I can imagine the support calls rocketing !
If anyone has any interest in their own networking at home, put the bleeping Hub in Modem mode, forget about it, and maintain your own network with a decent Router. As Seph has said many times, these Hubs are only a cheap, get you going device ......
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on 24-08-2018 12:23
@Engineer1 wrote:Yes indeed. I am very much bleeping bleeped off.
What a nonsense decision someone made. Presumably someone who doesn't know SH** about bleep is responsible for this bleepwitted situation.
Stephen
It is something the bleepwits could change in a future Hub 3 firmware but they won’t.
on 24-08-2018 12:32
Hi Adduxi,
Indeed. As message 167 of this thread reveals. There is no other elegant solution.
However, I don't agree that this is a particularly advanced function. Virgin locking it out is not reasonable, in my opinion.
I am now in modem mode, and all is smooth. Unfortunately Virgin sent me another 'We're really sorry, but we're going to be charging an extra £3.50 a month' letter a few days ago.
I neither want, nor need, a landline. I don't have, or want, any of their TV packages. Therefore I'm paying over £60 a month for broadband. That's too much. Time to leave, I think.
Thanks.
Stephen.
on 24-08-2018 12:38
Can anyone recommend a good router that doesn't cost the earth so I can get set up and have it in router mode?
Regards
JD