I have converted my phone sockets to RJ45, What I want to do is put the router in the bedroom for better WiFi, is it possible to connect the ONT to a network switch?
I have converted my phone sockets to RJ45, What I want to do is put the router in the bedroom for better WiFi, is it possible to connect the ONT to a network switch?
This will be the only way thanks, I was just trying to figure out a cheap quick way, I already have a swith in the bedroom that I use for my pc and laptop, I'm guessing it will be ok to connect the access point to the switch?
I have converted my phone sockets to RJ45, What I want to do is put the router in the bedroom for better WiFi, is it possible to connect the ONT to a network switch?
It's fine to connect the ONT to a switch if that switch is going to put the connection into a VLAN that is isolated and is then only used for transiting the connection to where you want then break it out to your router WAN. It's not ideal but it's not a taboo that you should never do.
I'm puzzled as to what you mean by you have converted your phone sockets to RJ45. You did rewire all the running cables to Cat5e or Cat6, yes?
My router is in a different room and I just ran a Cat6 cable to the ONT. I can't imagine why you would want a switch in the way. It offers no benefits since the first the only thing connected to the ONT should be the router.
My router is in a different room and I just ran a Cat6 cable to the ONT. I can't imagine why you would want a switch in the way. It offers no benefits since the first the only thing connected to the ONT should be the router.
As per the post above yours. You may want to have 2 or more routers for active passive failover so I too have my ONT plugged directly into a switch VLAN'ed off so that only the routers see the ONT
Also the switch gives you more bandwidth options if you're bottlenecked by a gigabit router
New builds tend to use cat5e or cat6 for internal phone cabling, but only terminate the required pairs. You can remove the RJ11 faceplate and replace it with RJ45, then terminate each end of the existing cable appropriately once you've figured out how they put it in. It's how I've got runs from the loft to my downstairs office and living room. Annoyingly they tend to be stapled in rather than run in any conduit so you can't use them to pull through fibre or better cabling (I doubt they'll install them 'nicely').
Whilst a direct physical connection from ONT to router WAN port is simplest you should be able to throw it over a switch using isolated ports/VLANS as suggested.
You will likely have to fiddle with MTU values and disable some protocols on the ports used (STP for example)
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