Is it possible to share an internet connection through WDS? I'm on the very edge of a wireless network, the spot that I'm in maintains a stable 22% according to XP with the help of a parabolic reflector crafted from a cheap pie tin. I was thinking I could grab another wireless router, use WDS to bridge the this router with the other one and share the 'net connection through it thus giving me a little bit more freedom but when I tried it it didn't work. WDS looks like it bridged the networks just fine, but I couldn't access anything on the internet. Do I need to do anything special or is this just not possible?
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You may just want to try it and troubleshoot as you go. Can't hurt. Is it possible to wire the routers together and use router B as wireless hub? – nicorellius Apr 20 '10 at 11:17
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No, they're too far apart. I'm trying to share an internet connection this way, I should've mentioned that earlier. I did try it and it didn't work, no 'net access from anything behind router B. – Enrico Tuvera Jr Apr 20 '10 at 13:06
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@cornjuliox, *Is it possible* is a pretty vague question. What specific problems are you having or are you questioning? – heavyd Apr 27 '10 at 03:56
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I enable WDS on router B and enter the connection details (key, SSID, etc) for router A. neither router is running anything other than the stock firmware. I don't get any internet access through anything connected to router B, but 'net access for machines connected to router A is fine. – Enrico Tuvera Jr Apr 29 '10 at 02:49
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Are you able to reach(ie ping) computer connected to router A from one connected to router B? Can router B ping router A? What kind of routers do you have? What IP address do they have? – heavyd Apr 29 '10 at 06:35
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Now that you mention it, I didn't change the routers' default IP addresses so they BOTH had 192.168.1.1 as an IP. Perhaps this is what's causing my problems? One router is a TP-LINK router that supports WDS out of the box, and the other is a Linksys, I forgot the exact model number but I'm sure its the one everyone likes to use with DD-WRT but I can't really change the firmware on the Linksys as its not my router. – Enrico Tuvera Jr May 01 '10 at 09:42
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Yes this is possible. I have done this configuration with both the DD-WRT and Tomato firmwares on on a Linksys WRT54GL. In my particular configuration I had a WRT54G acting as the router connected to the internet and my WRT54GL was bridging the connection to a couple of devices that I had wired to the WRT54GL.
I am no longer using this configuration, but I did have it running for over a year so I know that it works. I don't know if any of the stock firmwares support it, so you may have to install a 3rd part firmware on the router in order to get this feature.
heavyd
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1Make sure your router is [supported](http://www.polarcloud.com/tomatofaq#what_will_this_run_on), you don't want to brick it. [Here](http://www.dd-wrt.com/wiki/index.php/Supported_Devices) for DD-WRT. – Nathaniel Apr 28 '10 at 00:01
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Most modern router support wireless bridging now ;) I got a WBR-1310 that cost 30$ here an he support it right out of the box ;) – Marc-Andre R. Apr 30 '10 at 20:55