Worked perfectly with BGW210! Used TP-Link Deco Mesh System (X55) (3 units). Important to make sure you are using a ethernet cable connected to modem and PC. 1. Log into ATT modem using any browser. (192.168.1.254). 2. Disable Packet Filters. 3. Go into the firewall advanced tab and make sure all settings are set to off and then save. 4. Select allocation mode to IP Pass-through, then manually enter your routers MAC address (can be found on router) then save. 5. Make sure to turn off 2.4GHz wireless along with 5GHz signal. 6. Restart your modem. Should be all set to plug in your new/current router! Hope this helps somebody out there!
Can you explain why a person would want to disable packet filtering and all of the firewall settings? I assume it is because the new router will be doing all of that.
@@travistate1002 Spot on, New router will take care of all the security, ATT device is just a Modem at this point from what I've been understanding after hours of research
How did you put the deco into dhcp mode? Or was yours that way by default? I likely have the same deco systems you do (2 units though). Following your guide!
I am a recent AT&T customer and you have been a lifesaver. The folks at the AT&T store told me to call tech support, I tried two different times, one after hours and the other during business hours, and both times the agents had no idea what I was talking about when I asked about IP Passthrough, and the business hours guy told me that connecting a personal router to the AT&T device would not work. Basically, I had a horrible customer service experience, and you helped rectify it.
Definitely a lifesaver. I called ATT and they said my Ubiquity UXG Pro gateway was not compatible with the ATT 320 modem. That just didn't sound correct to me, and yes the ATT dude on the phone gave me incorrect information. Thank you sooo much for this awesome, clear, and concise video. It was very easy to follow. I have my UXG Pro and my ATT 320 modem working nicely now. Again, thank you, thank you...
Thank you for your video about the IP Passthrough - it helped me tremendously to optimize my ATT Internet Air Router/Modem. Unlike you, it took me about 18 hrs to get an internet signal to propagate to the LAN ports. My eventual solution was to reset the Internet Air AND the TP-Link (Archer AX3000-V1) router (it was in use before changing to Internet Air). Starting from factory reset settings on the router eventually fixed the internet connection issue that I previously had. The Internet Air modem I got from ATT is the BGW530-900 and the interface is almost identical to what you show in your video, however, my opinion of their built-in router is very low in comparison to the TP-Link router I had been using. It had many issues with connections dropping and with my Plex home media server in particular. It took some work on my part and re-re-reviewing your video a few times, but it was well worth it. Now my internet (live in the sticks - was on DSL before) and my home network run at a far superior speed than ever before. It now acts like Gigabit Ethernet from machine to machine - wired to wireless. (I had never configured the IPV6 on my router before this)
Totally fixed my double Nat and the bad reception I had from my router. Just a side note. To make sure all of the settings take effect once you make the changes. Power off all devices, modems, routers and let them cycle. Once it all comes back up you should have an OPEN NAT type. I'm using the ASUS RT AC5300 router on a XBOX series X.
This is nice and concise. I ran into an issue because the BGW320 must have DHCP enabled in order to let you set the passthrough mode to DHCPS-Fixed. Unfortunately with my LinkSys router (MX5500) once you do that it will sense that the BGW320 is assigning 192.168 addressess and the linksys router will now completely obliterate your own 192.168 network and switch it to some randome 10.10 network. If you're like me and have a lot of things like security cams, NAS units, etc on fixed addresses you now have a problem. To fix this I changed the IP Address of the BGW320 to 172.16.1.254 and set the DHCP range from 172.16.10 to 172.16.1.12 (the stupid BGW requires you have at least 2). Now you can put the BGW into passthrough mode as per the instructions in this video without worrying about Linksys changing your local 192.168 network to 10.10.x.x.
@@SPXLabs Could you possibly go 8nto more detail? I have a similar setup and am wondering if replacing the fiber cable that the installer used between the in house termination block and my BGW320-500 would speed things up? I'm running into the 2.5GB port on my UDM-PRO SE.
How did the switch go? Im currecntly running into an issue where the UDM SE isnt getting internet connection. Some folks on a forum said the Model Lan and UDM land cant both be on 192. I was wondering if this "gets around" from having to change all IP address on the ATT modem to 10. Any info would be useful.
Thank you! With these instructions I was able to set up my internet with my Asus AX5700 + AX3000 Extender with ease. Getting the full 1000 now in the house
Thank you! I had to dig around redit to find info about the "cascaded router" setup. It is not the same as IP Passthrough; don't use it unless you want to get confused. :). I do have all advanced firewall settings turned off like you. My TP-Link downstream gaming router AX10000 has the firewall. Like the mini-nuke you have behind you. I am a big Fallout fan.
thank you for this super easy spot on guide, just switched from Spectrum Cable 500/20 to AT&T fiber 300/300 and it is was super easy to keep my Uni router, POE switch and 4 APs with the IP Passthough
Thanks! Very straightforward- I too found quite a few different "how to do this" posts- many of them more complex/complicated than I wanted (I may be in IT but hardware etc is not my forte...). Off to try to set up my ASUS ZenWifi! Thank you... saving this video to bookmarks :)
Great video. I already had my ATT modem configured to use passthrough, but I thought it would be possible to configure it in bridge mode. Thanks for sharing!
Only issue i have with the ATT equipment is the mesh functionality is not great. It doesn’t hand off to the living room extender all that well. I have to turn my WiFi off on my phone and turn it back on once i have moved to the living room in order to ensure i am connected to the strongest signal. I may at some point get a separate router and mesh system but I have most of my static devices connected by Ethernet so it’s not a big problem right now. Also plan to move some time in the next 12 months and may not be able to get ATT in my new location anyway
I'm having good luck with Amplifi Alien. I have three in my house (different floors / areas of the house) and have wired devices plugged in & devices connecting over Wifi in each location with no issues.
Thank you so much for your help!!! I rarely comment, but I was intimidated cause I'd never used AT&T before. But you made this a breeze! Thank you man!!
@@warfionproductions6580 Apparently ATT has a list of ports that cannot be unblocked even upon request (due to security risk). You can find a list of these ports on their web page.
I’m also having issues with this and am at my wits end. I have a UCG ultra. It shows it sees the WANIP and I can get to the internet just fine from inside my network. When I try to access it externally at all I get nothing. Set up DDNS and even try to access directly via external WAN IP. just an empty browser page. So many solutions I have found online and none of them see to work for me. I assume I am doing something wrong but I can’t find out what. I noticed even the UCG says I can’t set up Remote Access despite a WANIP actually being assigned. Super stumped.
@@MatCSim it might be the case that att blocks some ports that your device want to use. To my knowledge, port 443 is reserved by Att for some internal usage. You might find this helpful as well: Bypass won’t work on XGS-PON. Only on older GPON installs. If 2Gb and 5Gb are available to order, you are on XGS-PON and there is no bypass available. If you can only order 1Gb service then you are most likely on GPON and can bypass with the correct switch or router and some certs.
Thanks for the great video! I have a question. I have this same exact modem/router but will be installing an eero mesh network with 3 nodes for better wifi coverage. When inputting the MAC address for the new router, do I just put the 1 MAC address that’s will be directly connected to the AT&T modem?
Great content!! Just wish you could do a video on a mesh network. I feel like I’m missing something on how to optimize my network. Keep grinding my Guy!
I've been seeing many comments like yours asking about mesh but unfortunately I don't own a mesh system so it probably isn't going to happen. But the best way to have a good mesh system is by having all of your access points directly connected to the BGW320 so they can provide the best wifi experience.
@@SPXLabsdo you mean plug the mesh units into each other? I know in bridge mode, the public IP is handed from the modem to your own firewall, is that not the same in IP Passthrough? I would think the internal switch on the ATT firewall would essentially be disabled if in Passthrough. I would recommend plugging a switch into the ATT firewall and connect all mesh units to that (or if the mesh units have several Ethernet ports, use those).
thank u for this, i getting att fiber pretty soon but i already have my router and cable modem that im keeping because i get gigabit cable internet free from the isp i work for, but i wanted to add a fiber connection, im going to be running both connections into my dual wan router and setting up in fail fallover mode basicly a back up if one goes down, i run my own servers in my house and my router is already configured with port forwarding and google dns domain and what not, im mosty just after the upload speeds fiber provides, as right now i only get 1100 down and 70 up
@@SPXLabs yea its to bad these ont fiber modems dont support 802.3ad otherwise i would bond the 2 connecions toghter in Link Aggregation mode to double the speeds but tbo that is kinda overkill, i work as a internet IT specialist for a internet cable company mosty from home these days so haveing a fall over backup connection in case one goes down isnt a bad idea, when ever im in the office they have pretty much te same setup two differant ISP's for redundancy
Does the nat table size of 8192 still apply in Passthrough mode? Do you ever have issues of hitting it? What happens if you reach it while in passthrough mode? From what I have read it is not that big of a NAT table.
I have no idea how to even begin checking for the table size. I’m not aware of ever hitting the NAT table while in Passthrough. As far as I can tell I have no issues with NAT
if i want to have a mesh system, do i daisy chain the 2nd router/mesh part onto my new router or do i plug it into at&ts box along with the first router
Do any wire goes from ATT gateway to the new modem or everything works wirelessly also can still use the new router also the ATT gateway to connect your room Ethernet wires or they should only be connected to the new router?
Great video. I’m running issue where I stay in duplex and my att gateway is on the lower level. But my rooms and most of my devices are located upstairs. There are many average to below average zones upstairs and I’m not getting anything close to what I’m paying for which is 1gig download. I could try going the wifi extender route, but it feels like a total ripoff to pay a monthly service fee to get coverage that I should already be getting with the gateway and 1gig plan. So trying to figure out if getting my own router with ip pass through would help me by moving my router upstairs. And then possibly using my own wifi extender to connect to the router for any other dead spots. Is this feasible or is there another way to enhance my wifi signal upstairs without paying for att extenders monthly?
Thank you for this informative video. I do have one question on the process: I attached my Lynksys Velop parent node to the BGW320-500 via ethernet and powered it up, but it does not show up in the device list even after doing the “clear and rescan” and it does not show up as a choice in the Passthrough device list dropdown. But the Lynksys Velop WiFi is connecting to the internet through the BGW320 gateway and can be accessed by devices. If the Velop WiFi is connecting to the internet but is not selected/added in the Passthrough Fixed MAC Address field on the gateway device, is the performance of the Velop WiFi being impacted?
Effecting WiFi performance, doubt it. WiFi is effected more by external factors; distance, objects, competing WiFi signals, radar, and other wavelength interference. However, you could have issues with double NAT, where software needs certain ports to be open. I know the ATT gateway won't show the MAC address in the drop down menu, I see it do that to this day. You can type it in manually and doing so does seem to work permanently. Can't speak for any of the other issues you mentioned.
Why is fixed preferred over dynamic? AT&T put the gateway into by pass mode but it was set to dynamic. We were experiencing buffering on our IPTV services even with VPN on and great speeds. I turned off packet filtering and firewall settings but it presided. I've now changed it to fixed, hoping that fixes it. Just curious why fixed is recommended in your video. Also the wifi was already off and our mesh system set up.
Hello and thank you for this video. We had our fiber 350 gateway in passthrough mode and working fine for months with our Unifi gateway. But we suspect that ATT pushed out some updates and all of a sudden the passthrough seemed not to be working any more. Have you noticed that updates will negate the passthrough settings and do you recommend turning off the 350 updates and if so how do we do that on the 350. thanks.
I'm not sure my BGW 320 has ever been updated. I haven't had any issues while configured in this mode. I don't believe you can turn off updates. The best you might be able to do is change the remote login password and that might help out but I don't it.
@@SPXLabs Thanks for that information. We're going to have a closer look at it this weekend. I don't think we know how to log in to the router remotely to put it back into pass-through mode. If you have information on that I'd appreciate it. I saw your video about the air exchange in the IT closet and we just had our HVAC guys put a dedicated cold air return line in the closet to pull the hot air out. Very helpful.
@@jeffcasterella8461 I am having these issues as well. Something definitely changed on the ATT BG320 side. I have been in Passthrough and Cascade router which this video is missing, since I had it installed a year or two ago. Something changed mid-January and since I have not been able to get Passthrough working. I have spent countless hours testing. Bottomline IMHO, Passthrough does very little without enabling Cascade. Once you enable Cascade, within 45 minutes you will start having reset connection issues.....I just bought a TP-Link Fiber converter and transceiver to see if I can just get rid of the BG320....doesnt deliver till tomorrow.
A firmware was pushed recently. Were you able to look into this and resolve the issues? I'm trying to figure out my options and purchase a router so I can set up NAT loopback for my ARK server.
@@devans83 my son and I think we have this resolved, and if a firmware update was pushed to ours it apparently handled it ok. The added wrinkle to our situation, which may have been the problem from the start, was that we had a smart power plug in place that the 320 was plugged into. The ATT tech who came to the house said most likely when the firmware update came through that the 320 tried to do power cycle and our "smart" plug did not like that and tried to restart the 320 in the middle of the firmware update - obviously not good. We have since removed the smart plug. It was a case where we thought the smart plug would be helpful but it actually caused a bunch of trouble. We are hoping all works well now. My son who is an engineer also set up a Proxmox so that we can login from a distance as if we are on site (he understands the far more than his Dad does....) so we are trying to create safety layers since we live 2000 miles from this network.
Thank you for very good information. I have a Linksys MX10600 Velop Mesh router system. I assume I choose the one that is directly hard wired to the BGW320 gateway. Correct?
Thanks for the detailed explanation in the video. One question, can I still use the ethernet ports in my rooms that are wired by default to the BGW320 even if I’m using my own router behind the gateway? As I don’t feel like laying a wire from my own router in the lounge to the room I want to wire my computer.
Quick question I’ve been having trouble setting up ip passthrough with my deco xe75 pro mesh system when i click on select device when enabling passthrough and i click on my mesh system it refreshes the pages and does let me choose the device any idea why am i doing something wrong i have att fiber with that same exact wifi box I currently have the mesh setup system set up as access points because i couldn’t get rid of double nat
Hello, just discovered your channel, good info. I recently changed to a eero 6+mesh system. With your method, would you also turn off the firewall on the att modem/router? I have the BGW 210.
I understand that you want your router to get its IP address dynamically from the gateway, but if you want your router to be the DHCP host for its clients, should you turn DHCP off on the BGW320?
Just switching from Xfinity with pfSense to AT&T fiber and had a question about WiFi. If I want to continue using the WiFi network created by the BGW320, is there a way to get it to route traffic on its WLAN to the pfSense's LAN subnets? Or is it best practice to use WAPs on the pfSense LAN to have interoperability between wired and wireless clients?
I’m guessing that anything either on WiFi or plugged into one of the other ports can still communicate with things behind your PFSense so long as it is not blocking those routes. Which I would imagine is the default action.
When plugging in my third party router, should I also plug it into an Ethernet port? Or just power. It sounds like since I have to disable the wifi on the BGW first, I do need to connect it to an ethernet port to connect the router to the gateway right
Could I still connect devices to the Att Gateway? I have 1 home server and planning on getting another one, but the router I'd like to get only has 1 extra ethernet port
Followed your steps. Not sure why I couldn't get it to work properly on my Edge Router X. Was able to have internet access on a wired laptop which was odd as I did not have internet access on my wired desktop or via WiFi from my U6 Lite AP. Going to keep troubleshooting.
@@SPXLabs wanted to follow up on this. Took a break for a couple weeks before re-attempting the configuration. Turns out, the eth0 on the ERX is static, so upon switching the connection from the BGW320 to eth1 (DHCP) on the ERX, voila, everything works.
@@slugger1024 Nice I didn't even think of that being the issue. I knew DHCP could be a problem and thats why I mentioned it's importance in the beginning of the video. But in your circumstance I never would have arrived there. Nice work my dude!!!! You did good!
@@SPXLabs looks like I may have spoken too soon. Everything seemed to be working last night. When I got online this morning only a few sites would load, youtube for example loaded, but reddit would not. Back to the drawing board.
So this is basically the same as bridging your router with your modem? What benefits does this have when you put your router on Mac passthrough? Does it improve speed when connected to the router? Also, which DNS servers and ports forwarded are valid after we do the IP passthrough , the ones on the router? Or the ones in the modem?
Also, I only have the one ethernet cable going from the BGW 320 router into my nighthawk. All my other connected ethernet devices are going straight into the nighthawk. The name is for hard wired is still the name from the BGW 320 router. I assume that is ok and anything hardwired is being channeled through my nighthawk?
turning on ip passthru is designed to 'passthru' the IP that is assigned from your ISP. It basically is turning the device into a bridge. No routing or NAT.
@SPXLabs ; I've always wondered about that though, as I saw a YT video years ago that demonstrated how AT&T really doesn't allow true bridging on their gateways even for IP pass-through mode. But the gateway actually stores an internal pool of public IP addresses. And selects one of those to pass through to your router. So the WAN IP address your router actually gets is not actually the same as the ISP's. Weird why AT&T would do this if true, instead of just allowing a genuine bridge mode option ....
@@H.T.2forever As far as I can tell that is all true. Everything AT&T does is ultimately for control and money. They can mostly appease the tech savvy folks by making it good enough but then pull the wool over the eyes of the non tech people and force them to pay a rental fee. Then the US government is too corrupt and stupid, so they lie to the gov and say it's for security reasons when in reality it's to earn just a few more dollars from as many people as possible.
I don’t know for sure. My assumption is fixed is for when ATT gives you an IP that you pay for, like in a business situation to on. Dynamic may be for homes where periodically a new IP is handed out.
So I did everything in the video and I’m using the ASUS rt-ax82u router, but I’m only getting about half the speeds that I was getting with the AT&T gateway router. Any suggestions?
Thanks for this great video. I'm trying to help a buddy setup the Linksys Easy VPN fort his office. He's has an ATT with BGW210 modem with a linksys router behind it. He has security cameras on the ATT BGW210 network so I don't want to mess up his remote viewing of those cameras. I'm assuming he has multiple IP's on the ATT Account. Does the IP Passthrough allow me to only pass one IP to the secondary router (Linksys) where I have the EasyVPN service setup? On the ATT modem, I don't see a way to forward one port to the Linksys router for VPN traffic. Can you provide that info? Thank You!
I guess what I am asking is all hard wired connections will be going through my passthrough router (nighthawk) even though the name is still showing up as my ATT fiber router?
Hey Stefano, thanks for the vid! I have the same TP-Link Router you showed in the vid. To get the best out of my 5gb ATT fiber, would I still be able to use the setup you mentioned here and simply add the TL-SG3210XHP TP-Link Switch ? Or would I still be stuck with 1gb speed because I am using the Tp router? DO you recommend simply sticking with the ATT router and adding the switch instead? Thanks!
That's kind of a loaded question because it depends on your expectations for your network configuration, like firewall, vlans, DNS, etc etc. If you don't care about any of that stuff, then sure, ditch your tp-link router and use your switch. What I did for a little bit when I had 5G, was just connect my 1 server that needed internet access (container using a specific port) to the 5G ethernet port and the rest of the network was 1G, behind my TP Link hardware. Even with IP Passthrough, you can still use all of the ports on the back of the BGW 320, the systems will just be on a different subnet, and you can still reach them from your TP link subnet, assuming you aren't blocking routes between the two subnets. Anyway, not really an answer because unfortunately, it just depends on what you want to do and what your focus is.
@@SPXLabs thanks a ton! I should have mentioned I am running everything through the OMADA system, so I have all my switches and router connected to the controller. That is why I wanted to stick with the TP link switch and the SFP connector you did on another vid. Thanks for the reply my man!
Just came to say THANKS for this video and it’s earlier companion video (the one for disabling WiFi on the 350 router, to make this happen)! I do have a question, and I understand this may be a little subjective - what mesh system would you recommend to get the most out of your 1GB fiber? I have the Google WiFi router and I notice it drops signal strength significantly despite having 4 satellites placed around the house. I’m curious if a Netgear Orbi would be a dramatic improvement over this.
I can’t really give you a good answer because I’ve never used any mesh systems. However, my neighbor that is a savvy IT guy is super happy with his TP-Link Deco M9. His house is about 2500sq ft.
Hey I was wondering would it work if I was using the bgw320 and use pass through to a separate wireless router for my room only? I use AT&Ts Wi-Fi extender to get Ethernet connection but noticed I’m paying $10 extra and it’s not giving me the full 1k up and down.
It's highly unlikely you will ever see 1Gpbs Up and Down. You can also use your own equipment regardless if you do IP Passthrough or not. If you use your own Wireless AP just remember to turn the wifi off on the BGW320
Is this what I would do if I want to set up a second dedicated accesspoint with a different name? Basically want to keep using the BGW for my normal devices like apple tv, phones, etc, and then a second router with only my gaming devices.
You don’t have to do this if you add a dedicated access point. If you use a second router you will probably want to do this if you have issues with NAT.
Hi there, Excellent video! Question for you! I use Orbi RBR850 and instead of selecting DHCP fixed, I used DHCP dynamic and so far my connection has been working just fine. The only reason I decided to enable IP passthrough for my BGW320 is because my xbox detected a double NAT. After I made some setting adjustments on the BGW320, I re-ran the network configuration on the Xbox and the NAT type was now set to Open and Double NAT was gone. Should I continue to use DHCP dynamic?
Hi Stefano, I’m over here in Meridianville AL, I presently have the 2Gbps/2Gbps service. I am set to Passthrough mode and DHCP Dynamic. The reason for not using DHCP Fixed is I wanted my router to be given my real WAN IP address. The ATT box now passes the WAN IP address to my UniFi UXG instead of a 192.168.x.x address. Very helpful! I want to upgrade to the 5Gbps service but the UniFi UXG (and UDM Pro/SE) will rate limit to approximately 3.5 Gbps when IPS is enabled. I really want the 5Gbps service but trying to justify throwing away 1.5 Gbps due to the IPS overhead. Just an FYI. Thanks for your videos. 🍻
Weird that the SE would be slower than the older UDMP. I was seeing 4.5Gbp+ with IPS enabled on my old UDMP. Honestly though, what I do, is pay for 1Gbps and get 1.2~1.3Gbps because ATT over provisions their network. You just need the right SFP+ module. Relevant video ua-cam.com/video/nM0gFzDU9fo/v-deo.html
Thanks for the reply! My understanding is your UDM SE and my UXG-Pro-US have the same capabilities for IPS throughput. Great to hear that you can see 4.5Gbps when the IPS is enabled. Well not so great because it looks like I may need to upgrade. Lol. By the way, my ATT provided HUMAX BGW320-500 is synced up with my UNIFI UXG-Pro-US at 10 Gbps via Cat 6 RJ45. I’ll let you know if I take the plunge and upgrade to 5 Gbps service. 🍻
Man, something up with internet connectivity. I signed up for ATT because with Sprectrum 1 GB plan I was only getting 400-500mb/s over WiFi using my gli net Flint2 router. So I get Fiber 1Gb plan and I only get 400-500mb/s over WiFi on the BGW210. The only time I’ve gotten like 979 mb/s is if I connect my Mac to my gli-net Flint2 router via Ethernet and have that router connect via WiFi to my BGW210. All day long I get 900+ mb/s like this. Any other way on any other device I’m only getting 400-500mb/s. Why is this? I was expecting to get 900+mb/s on anything I connect. And then when I do the speed test provided on the ATT app, it apparently get 1300+ through the fiber wire, but from my router to the items in my home it’s a 3rd of that. Why?
How do you disable the gateway’s WiFi so I can use my personal mesh router’s WiFi? In Device > Status, it lists my 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz as enabled, but there are no buttons to disable it.
When I go to Allocation Mode and change it to Passthrough, the Passthrough Mode field is greyed out displacing "Manual" and won't let me change it to DHCPS-fixed as you mentioned It also will not let me enter anything into the Passthrough Fixed MAC Address field. Any advice? Thanks!
Hi! So is double Nat over wifi on a phone something like this: testing the wifi speed I get full speed np. But loading some apps take time to load more than normal?
Network address translation (NAT) is a function that your router or gateway performs to create your network. NAT changes the wide area network (WAN) IP address that your Internet service provider (ISP) assigns you from public to private, which allows multiple devices in your network to share it. NAT also secures your network by blocking direct access to your local IP addresses. For more information, see What is NAT (Network Address Translation)? Double NAT occurs when you connect your router to an ISP gateway or another router. Because NAT is performed by each router or gateway, your network is split into two different private networks. The devices connected to one private network might have communication problems with the devices connected to the other private network, and you might experience problems with: 1. Online games 2. VPN connections 3. Port forwarding and triggering 4. Secure websites that use SSL
Hello. I am trying for a month to make it working, my issue is that only broadcast packets are being passed... rest of the traffic is still handled by the bg... any ideas ?
There is no way to completely bypass the BGW320. This is by design so AT&T can charge customers a rental fee. AT&T has not implemented true IP Passthrough.
This is a great video, thank you! How do I find the MAC address(es) of my UDM Pro? Are there different MAC addresses for each port? I want to use the SFP port (on the UDM Pro) with an appropriate adapter to the 5G port of the BGW 320-is this possible?
The UDMP only has one mac address which can be found in UniFi, on the box, or on the back of the device. ua-cam.com/video/nM0gFzDU9fo/v-deo.html&pp=ygUTc3B4IGxhYnMgdWRtIHBybyA1Zw%3D%3D
I have a BGW 320 and while the passthrough is working, NAT port forwarding trough to my my tp-link Archer BE800 is not. Anyone successfully troubleshoot this problem? Suggestions?
Thanks for the info. The setup worked. However.. is it possible to make my devices anonymous to the ATT router? I want my personal router to handle all the traffic and ISP to not know what device is connecting to what. Is this possible?
Yes. On your router create an ACL or firewall rule that blocks the att subnet from the rest of your network. However, create a rule that also allows your equipment to talk to the att router. A unidirectional connection if you will
I work from home as a photoshop retoucher (20gb+ file sizes). I have 1gb fiber and ATT BGW 320-505. My company is getting me a Synology NAS to sync files back and forth in the background. I want to get a switch so I would have more ports. Do I need to re-configure the ATT BGW 320-505 when adding the switch?
With IP passthrough, does connecting devices directly to the BGW320 still work? For instance, if I do IP passthrough for my mesh wifi, can I still plug my desktop into another port on the back of the BGW320, or will it no longer NAT?
@@SPXLabs So that's because it's IP Passthru and not bridge mode? Interesting. I might leave the AT&T's 2.4ghz online and use that for all my Wyzecams, the Nest etc that don't need to be on my actual LAN. That'll leave my primary 2.4ghz signal with less traffic.
Worked perfectly with BGW210! Used TP-Link Deco Mesh System (X55) (3 units).
Important to make sure you are using a ethernet cable connected to modem and PC.
1. Log into ATT modem using any browser. (192.168.1.254).
2. Disable Packet Filters.
3. Go into the firewall advanced tab and make sure all settings are set to off and then save.
4. Select allocation mode to IP Pass-through, then manually enter your routers MAC address (can be found on router) then save.
5. Make sure to turn off 2.4GHz wireless along with 5GHz signal.
6. Restart your modem.
Should be all set to plug in your new/current router!
Hope this helps somebody out there!
Can you explain why a person would want to disable packet filtering and all of the firewall settings? I assume it is because the new router will be doing all of that.
@@travistate1002 Spot on, New router will take care of all the security, ATT device is just a Modem at this point from what I've been understanding after hours of research
Thanks for this, I just moved and I had to get the exact same equipment going.
How did you put the deco into dhcp mode? Or was yours that way by default? I likely have the same deco systems you do (2 units though). Following your guide!
@@lawbringerx8505it seems to be the default.
I am a recent AT&T customer and you have been a lifesaver. The folks at the AT&T store told me to call tech support, I tried two different times, one after hours and the other during business hours, and both times the agents had no idea what I was talking about when I asked about IP Passthrough, and the business hours guy told me that connecting a personal router to the AT&T device would not work.
Basically, I had a horrible customer service experience, and you helped rectify it.
Sorry you had to go through that with them.
I’m glad I could help
Which number you called to reach ATT tech support?
@@staspetryshyn it's been almost a year, so I don't recall, but I think it was the number I got from the AT&T store.
Definitely a lifesaver. I called ATT and they said my Ubiquity UXG Pro gateway was not compatible with the ATT 320 modem. That just didn't sound correct to me, and yes the ATT dude on the phone gave me incorrect information. Thank you sooo much for this awesome, clear, and concise video. It was very easy to follow. I have my UXG Pro and my ATT 320 modem working nicely now. Again, thank you, thank you...
Just to confirm did you get your public IP to show on your Ubiquity device?
@melenrdr yes
Thank you for your video about the IP Passthrough - it helped me tremendously to optimize my ATT Internet Air Router/Modem. Unlike you, it took me about 18 hrs to get an internet signal to propagate to the LAN ports. My eventual solution was to reset the Internet Air AND the TP-Link (Archer AX3000-V1) router (it was in use before changing to Internet Air). Starting from factory reset settings on the router eventually fixed the internet connection issue that I previously had. The Internet Air modem I got from ATT is the BGW530-900 and the interface is almost identical to what you show in your video, however, my opinion of their built-in router is very low in comparison to the TP-Link router I had been using. It had many issues with connections dropping and with my Plex home media server in particular. It took some work on my part and re-re-reviewing your video a few times, but it was well worth it. Now my internet (live in the sticks - was on DSL before) and my home network run at a far superior speed than ever before. It now acts like Gigabit Ethernet from machine to machine - wired to wireless. (I had never configured the IPV6 on my router before this)
Thanks a bunch. Used it to get my Orbi system online after switching from Xfinity to ATT.
Totally fixed my double Nat and the bad reception I had from my router. Just a side note. To make sure all of the settings take effect once you make the changes. Power off all devices, modems, routers and let them cycle. Once it all comes back up you should have an OPEN NAT type.
I'm using the ASUS RT AC5300 router on a XBOX series X.
Great tip!
This is nice and concise. I ran into an issue because the BGW320 must have DHCP enabled in order to let you set the passthrough mode to DHCPS-Fixed. Unfortunately with my LinkSys router (MX5500) once you do that it will sense that the BGW320 is assigning 192.168 addressess and the linksys router will now completely obliterate your own 192.168 network and switch it to some randome 10.10 network. If you're like me and have a lot of things like security cams, NAS units, etc on fixed addresses you now have a problem. To fix this I changed the IP Address of the BGW320 to 172.16.1.254 and set the DHCP range from 172.16.10 to 172.16.1.12 (the stupid BGW requires you have at least 2). Now you can put the BGW into passthrough mode as per the instructions in this video without worrying about Linksys changing your local 192.168 network to 10.10.x.x.
Thanks for this! Just signed up for ATT Fiber internet and also have a UDM Pro that controls my network. Hope the switch goes smoothly! 👍👍
Don’t forget if you buy fiber module that supports 1, 2.5, 5, & 10GbE you can get more internet than you pay for
Will definitely be trying that out!
@@SPXLabs Could you possibly go 8nto more detail? I have a similar setup and am wondering if replacing the fiber cable that the installer used between the in house termination block and my BGW320-500 would speed things up? I'm running into the 2.5GB port on my UDM-PRO SE.
More detail where? I wouldn’t replace any of the fiber. It should be more than good enough.
How did the switch go? Im currecntly running into an issue where the UDM SE isnt getting internet connection. Some folks on a forum said the Model Lan and UDM land cant both be on 192. I was wondering if this "gets around" from having to change all IP address on the ATT modem to 10. Any info would be useful.
Thank You! Just got on and there are some convoluted instruction out there, you saved me a ton of stress.
Hell yeah brother!
I can’t get the fixed DHCP to work with a UDMP though, only dynamic works. Still great info.
Thank you!
With these instructions I was able to set up my internet with my Asus AX5700 + AX3000 Extender with ease. Getting the full 1000 now in the house
Thank you for putting this together. Been struggling with strange network anomalies for a long time!
Thank you! I had to dig around redit to find info about the "cascaded router" setup. It is not the same as IP Passthrough; don't use it unless you want to get confused. :).
I do have all advanced firewall settings turned off like you. My TP-Link downstream gaming router AX10000 has the firewall.
Like the mini-nuke you have behind you. I am a big Fallout fan.
thanks a lot! Now i can use my XR500 NetGear router so I can GEO filter when I game without having double NAT!
I did this for R2 router & I can’t forward any Ports. Does turning UPnP on open ports for u?
thank you for this super easy spot on guide, just switched from Spectrum Cable 500/20 to AT&T fiber 300/300 and it is was super easy to keep my Uni router, POE switch and 4 APs with the IP Passthough
Thank you for making setting up my router with my new fiber install quick and easy. Appreciate !
Thanks for the tip!
Thanks! Very straightforward- I too found quite a few different "how to do this" posts- many of them more complex/complicated than I wanted (I may be in IT but hardware etc is not my forte...). Off to try to set up my ASUS ZenWifi! Thank you... saving this video to bookmarks :)
NOTE: if you are using that Linksys you won't get good speeds 😲🤓😎
Hey, yo. It's faster than you!
Not true
He’s referencing the router I showed in the video that is about 20 years old.
Linksys WRT54G
Thank you so much for this! Very easy to follow!
Glad it was helpful!
Great video. I already had my ATT modem configured to use passthrough, but I thought it would be possible to configure it in bridge mode. Thanks for sharing!
Using a WRT54G as a prop in a video where you have 5Gb internet service was golden.
Finally someone noticed! THANK YOU!
Only issue i have with the ATT equipment is the mesh functionality is not great. It doesn’t hand off to the living room extender all that well. I have to turn my WiFi off on my phone and turn it back on once i have moved to the living room in order to ensure i am connected to the strongest signal. I may at some point get a separate router and mesh system but I have most of my static devices connected by Ethernet so it’s not a big problem right now. Also plan to move some time in the next 12 months and may not be able to get ATT in my new location anyway
That’s the exact issue I am having. The devices do not move to the next extender. Mesh might be a better option for me
I'm having good luck with Amplifi Alien. I have three in my house (different floors / areas of the house) and have wired devices plugged in & devices connecting over Wifi in each location with no issues.
Thank you so much for your help!!! I rarely comment, but I was intimidated cause I'd never used AT&T before. But you made this a breeze! Thank you man!!
Just for you!
This finally fixed my issues. Thank you! 🙏
Thank you! You helped me with properly setting up my Eeros, and now this! Thank you, yoire the best!
Very helpful! Thanks for taking the time to make this video.
Glad it was helpful!
Thanks dude! Clear and concise and just what I need appreciate it so much!
Thanks for this guide! It's working great!
No problem
Very nicely done!
Thank you very much!
If you set up port forwarding on your own router with BGW320 in a passthrough mode - will it work? Or ATT network still would keep ports blocked?
I’m having issues with this. Were you able to get this to work?
@@warfionproductions6580 Apparently ATT has a list of ports that cannot be unblocked even upon request (due to security risk). You can find a list of these ports on their web page.
I’m also having issues with this and am at my wits end. I have a UCG ultra. It shows it sees the WANIP and I can get to the internet just fine from inside my network. When I try to access it externally at all I get nothing. Set up DDNS and even try to access directly via external WAN IP. just an empty browser page. So many solutions I have found online and none of them see to work for me. I assume I am doing something wrong but I can’t find out what. I noticed even the UCG says I can’t set up Remote Access despite a WANIP actually being assigned. Super stumped.
@@MatCSim it might be the case that att blocks some ports that your device want to use. To my knowledge, port 443 is reserved by Att for some internal usage. You might find this helpful as well:
Bypass won’t work on XGS-PON. Only on older GPON installs. If 2Gb and 5Gb are available to order, you are on XGS-PON and there is no bypass available. If you can only order 1Gb service then you are most likely on GPON and can bypass with the correct switch or router and some certs.
I'm also having trouble getting port forwarding to work. Ports forwarded on my router test as closed. Anyone have troubleshooting advice?
Thanks for the great video! I have a question. I have this same exact modem/router but will be installing an eero mesh network with 3 nodes for better wifi coverage. When inputting the MAC address for the new router, do I just put the 1 MAC address that’s will be directly connected to the AT&T modem?
Yes, the first main pod/puck/ routers mac
Worked like a charm in minutes! Thank you.
Glad it helped!
Great content!!
Just wish you could do a video on a mesh network.
I feel like I’m missing something on how to optimize my network.
Keep grinding my Guy!
I've been seeing many comments like yours asking about mesh but unfortunately I don't own a mesh system so it probably isn't going to happen. But the best way to have a good mesh system is by having all of your access points directly connected to the BGW320 so they can provide the best wifi experience.
@@SPXLabs hello, what do you mean by this?
Plug the mesh points into the gateway with an Ethernet cable
@@SPXLabsdo you mean plug the mesh units into each other? I know in bridge mode, the public IP is handed from the modem to your own firewall, is that not the same in IP Passthrough? I would think the internal switch on the ATT firewall would essentially be disabled if in Passthrough. I would recommend plugging a switch into the ATT firewall and connect all mesh units to that (or if the mesh units have several Ethernet ports, use those).
Neato
Cheers!
This is perfect. Thank you!
This was awesome!!! Thank you :)
Thanks for this VERY helpful video!! Got my Netgear Nighthawk Xr1000 up and working fast!
So your XR1000 replaced the art gateway right?
Thanks for the video. It helped me.
Why wouldn’t you show us to disable the WiFi? The video is only 7 minute long.
Can’t please everyone… 🤷♂️
@@SPXLabs I mean, you could have easily speed run it in 30 seconds so you hit every mark.
lol if I was a good content creator then I’d agree
@@SPXLabs I mean, you have multiple videos with over 100k views. You are doing something right my dude
thank u for this, i getting att fiber pretty soon but i already have my router and cable modem that im keeping because i get gigabit cable internet free from the isp i work for, but i wanted to add a fiber connection, im going to be running both connections into my dual wan router and setting up in fail fallover mode basicly a back up if one goes down, i run my own servers in my house and my router is already configured with port forwarding and google dns domain and what not, im mosty just after the upload speeds fiber provides, as right now i only get 1100 down and 70 up
That sounds awesome. hopefully that upload speed starts matching your download speed!
@@SPXLabs yea its to bad these ont fiber modems dont support 802.3ad otherwise i would bond the 2 connecions toghter in Link Aggregation mode to double the speeds but tbo that is kinda overkill, i work as a internet IT specialist for a internet cable company mosty from home these days so haveing a fall over backup connection in case one goes down isnt a bad idea, when ever im in the office they have pretty much te same setup two differant ISP's for redundancy
That’s awesome man. And yeah that is too bad.
That's a *LOT* of colons good thing you have *fiber* haha!
🤣🤣🤣🤣
savage!
Does the nat table size of 8192 still apply in Passthrough mode? Do you ever have issues of hitting it? What happens if you reach it while in passthrough mode? From what I have read it is not that big of a NAT table.
I have no idea how to even begin checking for the table size. I’m not aware of ever hitting the NAT table while in Passthrough. As far as I can tell I have no issues with NAT
@@SPXLabs The NAT Table size can be found on the ATT device page under Diagnostics > NAT Table.
Mine says:
Total sessions available 8192
Good video man !!
No you
@@SPXLabs me now !
Well done Sir!!!!
if i want to have a mesh system, do i daisy chain the 2nd router/mesh part onto my new router or do i plug it into at&ts box along with the first router
You pass-through att's box and straight into mesh router
how do you put it back or manage it once it is in passthrough mode?
Use the same URL while directly connected to the BGW 320
Do any wire goes from ATT gateway to the new modem or everything works wirelessly also can still use the new router also the ATT gateway to connect your room Ethernet wires or they should only be connected to the new router?
Great video. I’m running issue where I stay in duplex and my att gateway is on the lower level. But my rooms and most of my devices are located upstairs. There are many average to below average zones upstairs and I’m not getting anything close to what I’m paying for which is 1gig download.
I could try going the wifi extender route, but it feels like a total ripoff to pay a monthly service fee to get coverage that I should already be getting with the gateway and 1gig plan.
So trying to figure out if getting my own router with ip pass through would help me by moving my router upstairs. And then possibly using my own wifi extender to connect to the router for any other dead spots.
Is this feasible or is there another way to enhance my wifi signal upstairs without paying for att extenders monthly?
Wifi is too difficult to troubleshoot via youtube comments. my recommendation would be to watch videos describing how certain situations perform.
Thank you
Thank you for this informative video. I do have one question on the process: I attached my Lynksys Velop parent node to the BGW320-500 via ethernet and powered it up, but it does not show up in the device list even after doing the “clear and rescan” and it does not show up as a choice in the Passthrough device list dropdown. But the Lynksys Velop WiFi is connecting to the internet through the BGW320 gateway and can be accessed by devices. If the Velop WiFi is connecting to the internet but is not selected/added in the Passthrough Fixed MAC Address field on the gateway device, is the performance of the Velop WiFi being impacted?
Effecting WiFi performance, doubt it. WiFi is effected more by external factors; distance, objects, competing WiFi signals, radar, and other wavelength interference. However, you could have issues with double NAT, where software needs certain ports to be open.
I know the ATT gateway won't show the MAC address in the drop down menu, I see it do that to this day. You can type it in manually and doing so does seem to work permanently. Can't speak for any of the other issues you mentioned.
Thanks
Dude, I've got that same shirt 😎
Pics or it didn’t happen
Thank you!!!!
You're my hero!!
Awww 🥰
Why is fixed preferred over dynamic? AT&T put the gateway into by pass mode but it was set to dynamic. We were experiencing buffering on our IPTV services even with VPN on and great speeds. I turned off packet filtering and firewall settings but it presided. I've now changed it to fixed, hoping that fixes it. Just curious why fixed is recommended in your video. Also the wifi was already off and our mesh system set up.
Hello and thank you for this video. We had our fiber 350 gateway in passthrough mode and working fine for months with our Unifi gateway. But we suspect that ATT pushed out some updates and all of a sudden the passthrough seemed not to be working any more. Have you noticed that updates will negate the passthrough settings and do you recommend turning off the 350 updates and if so how do we do that on the 350. thanks.
I'm not sure my BGW 320 has ever been updated. I haven't had any issues while configured in this mode. I don't believe you can turn off updates. The best you might be able to do is change the remote login password and that might help out but I don't it.
@@SPXLabs Thanks for that information. We're going to have a closer look at it this weekend. I don't think we know how to log in to the router remotely to put it back into pass-through mode. If you have information on that I'd appreciate it. I saw your video about the air exchange in the IT closet and we just had our HVAC guys put a dedicated cold air return line in the closet to pull the hot air out. Very helpful.
@@jeffcasterella8461 I am having these issues as well. Something definitely changed on the ATT BG320 side. I have been in Passthrough and Cascade router which this video is missing, since I had it installed a year or two ago. Something changed mid-January and since I have not been able to get Passthrough working. I have spent countless hours testing. Bottomline IMHO, Passthrough does very little without enabling Cascade. Once you enable Cascade, within 45 minutes you will start having reset connection issues.....I just bought a TP-Link Fiber converter and transceiver to see if I can just get rid of the BG320....doesnt deliver till tomorrow.
A firmware was pushed recently. Were you able to look into this and resolve the issues? I'm trying to figure out my options and purchase a router so I can set up NAT loopback for my ARK server.
@@devans83 my son and I think we have this resolved, and if a firmware update was pushed to ours it apparently handled it ok. The added wrinkle to our situation, which may have been the problem from the start, was that we had a smart power plug in place that the 320 was plugged into. The ATT tech who came to the house said most likely when the firmware update came through that the 320 tried to do power cycle and our "smart" plug did not like that and tried to restart the 320 in the middle of the firmware update - obviously not good. We have since removed the smart plug. It was a case where we thought the smart plug would be helpful but it actually caused a bunch of trouble. We are hoping all works well now. My son who is an engineer also set up a Proxmox so that we can login from a distance as if we are on site (he understands the far more than his Dad does....) so we are trying to create safety layers since we live 2000 miles from this network.
Thank you for very good information. I have a Linksys MX10600 Velop Mesh router system. I assume I choose the one that is directly hard wired to the BGW320 gateway. Correct?
Yeah that sounds legit
Thanks for the detailed explanation in the video. One question, can I still use the ethernet ports in my rooms that are wired by default to the BGW320 even if I’m using my own router behind the gateway? As I don’t feel like laying a wire from my own router in the lounge to the room I want to wire my computer.
Yes you can!
Quick question I’ve been having trouble setting up ip passthrough with my deco xe75 pro mesh system when i click on select device when enabling passthrough and i click on my mesh system it refreshes the pages and does let me choose the device any idea why am i doing something wrong i have att fiber with that same exact wifi box I currently have the mesh setup system set up as access points because i couldn’t get rid of double nat
How to set up cascade router on the AT&T software?
Would this cause any issues with port forwarding on the router you have passed through? Or do I need to forward ports on the BGW320 as well?
More than likely not. It just depends on what ports we are talking about here
@@SPXLabs Generally things such as ports for a Plex server.
Naw. It’s the more common ports where you may run into issues
@@SPXLabs Awesome thank you for your help
Hello, just discovered your channel, good info. I recently changed to a eero 6+mesh system. With your method, would you also turn off the firewall on the att modem/router? I have the BGW 210.
You can if you want. It won't hurt anything if you do.
I understand that you want your router to get its IP address dynamically from the gateway, but if you want your router to be the DHCP host for its clients, should you turn DHCP off on the BGW320?
Just switching from Xfinity with pfSense to AT&T fiber and had a question about WiFi.
If I want to continue using the WiFi network created by the BGW320, is there a way to get it to route traffic on its WLAN to the pfSense's LAN subnets? Or is it best practice to use WAPs on the pfSense LAN to have interoperability between wired and wireless clients?
I’m guessing that anything either on WiFi or plugged into one of the other ports can still communicate with things behind your PFSense so long as it is not blocking those routes. Which I would imagine is the default action.
When plugging in my third party router, should I also plug it into an Ethernet port? Or just power. It sounds like since I have to disable the wifi on the BGW first, I do need to connect it to an ethernet port to connect the router to the gateway right
I don’t understand. Can you rephrase?
I really appreciate this but how do you update the Synology RT2600ac after this happens
Unplug and plug it back in. But no I do not.
So, you need DHCP on the WAN side. Lan side, will also need a DHCP server, but that doesn't have to be the router.
Depends on how you want to set up your network
Could I still connect devices to the Att Gateway? I have 1 home server and planning on getting another one, but the router I'd like to get only has 1 extra ethernet port
Yes.
@@SPXLabs thanks
how do i connect the google Nest Wifi Pro router to the ATT Fiber so that I can have Google Mesh?
Followed your steps. Not sure why I couldn't get it to work properly on my Edge Router X. Was able to have internet access on a wired laptop which was odd as I did not have internet access on my wired desktop or via WiFi from my U6 Lite AP. Going to keep troubleshooting.
Usually rebooting after making the changes fixes it
@@SPXLabs wanted to follow up on this. Took a break for a couple weeks before re-attempting the configuration. Turns out, the eth0 on the ERX is static, so upon switching the connection from the BGW320 to eth1 (DHCP) on the ERX, voila, everything works.
@@slugger1024 Nice I didn't even think of that being the issue. I knew DHCP could be a problem and thats why I mentioned it's importance in the beginning of the video. But in your circumstance I never would have arrived there. Nice work my dude!!!! You did good!
@@SPXLabs looks like I may have spoken too soon. Everything seemed to be working last night. When I got online this morning only a few sites would load, youtube for example loaded, but reddit would not. Back to the drawing board.
That’s really weird. I have no idea what would cause that. Sorry about all the trouble you are having
So this is basically the same as bridging your router with your modem? What benefits does this have when you put your router on Mac passthrough? Does it improve speed when connected to the router?
Also, which DNS servers and ports forwarded are valid after we do the IP passthrough , the ones on the router? Or the ones in the modem?
How did you configure your ER605 router to DHCP under the Omada Hardware Controller🤔?
That's the default setting.
Also, I only have the one ethernet cable going from the BGW 320 router into my nighthawk. All my other connected ethernet devices are going straight into the nighthawk. The name is for hard wired is still the name from the BGW 320 router. I assume that is ok and anything hardwired is being channeled through my nighthawk?
I’m not sure what you mean but whatever it is doesn’t sound like a problem
What port is used on the bgw320 to set up passthrough
turning on ip passthru is designed to 'passthru' the IP that is assigned from your ISP. It basically is turning the device into a bridge. No routing or NAT.
yes
@SPXLabs ;
I've always wondered about that though, as I saw a YT video years ago that demonstrated how AT&T really doesn't allow true bridging on their gateways even for IP pass-through mode.
But the gateway actually stores an internal pool of public IP addresses. And selects one of those to pass through to your router.
So the WAN IP address your router actually gets is not actually the same as the ISP's.
Weird why AT&T would do this if true, instead of just allowing a genuine bridge mode option ....
@@H.T.2forever As far as I can tell that is all true. Everything AT&T does is ultimately for control and money. They can mostly appease the tech savvy folks by making it good enough but then pull the wool over the eyes of the non tech people and force them to pay a rental fee. Then the US government is too corrupt and stupid, so they lie to the gov and say it's for security reasons when in reality it's to earn just a few more dollars from as many people as possible.
What's would the difference between Dhcps fixed and dynamic be
I don’t know for sure. My assumption is fixed is for when ATT gives you an IP that you pay for, like in a business situation to on. Dynamic may be for homes where periodically a new IP is handed out.
Thanks!
No, thank you!
@@SPXLabs OK. I am not sure what is the proper method here but I truly appreciate your information.. No offense was ever meant
Lol I can’t type. I was trying to thank you back
So I did everything in the video and I’m using the ASUS rt-ax82u router, but I’m only getting about half the speeds that I was getting with the AT&T gateway router. Any suggestions?
Reboot the ATT gateway
Thanks for this great video. I'm trying to help a buddy setup the Linksys Easy VPN fort his office. He's has an ATT with BGW210 modem with a linksys router behind it. He has security cameras on the ATT BGW210 network so I don't want to mess up his remote viewing of those cameras. I'm assuming he has multiple IP's on the ATT Account. Does the IP Passthrough allow me to only pass one IP to the secondary router (Linksys) where I have the EasyVPN service setup? On the ATT modem, I don't see a way to forward one port to the Linksys router for VPN traffic. Can you provide that info? Thank You!
ua-cam.com/video/Fbb5T9VWFZ8/v-deo.html Maybe this will help, I hope.
I guess what I am asking is all hard wired connections will be going through my passthrough router (nighthawk) even though the name is still showing up as my ATT fiber router?
Hey Stefano, thanks for the vid! I have the same TP-Link Router you showed in the vid. To get the best out of my 5gb ATT fiber, would I still be able to use the setup you mentioned here and simply add the TL-SG3210XHP TP-Link Switch ? Or would I still be stuck with 1gb speed because I am using the Tp router? DO you recommend simply sticking with the ATT router and adding the switch instead? Thanks!
That's kind of a loaded question because it depends on your expectations for your network configuration, like firewall, vlans, DNS, etc etc. If you don't care about any of that stuff, then sure, ditch your tp-link router and use your switch. What I did for a little bit when I had 5G, was just connect my 1 server that needed internet access (container using a specific port) to the 5G ethernet port and the rest of the network was 1G, behind my TP Link hardware.
Even with IP Passthrough, you can still use all of the ports on the back of the BGW 320, the systems will just be on a different subnet, and you can still reach them from your TP link subnet, assuming you aren't blocking routes between the two subnets.
Anyway, not really an answer because unfortunately, it just depends on what you want to do and what your focus is.
@@SPXLabs thanks a ton! I should have mentioned I am running everything through the OMADA system, so I have all my switches and router connected to the controller. That is why I wanted to stick with the TP link switch and the SFP connector you did on another vid. Thanks for the reply my man!
No problem! Best of luck
should i also turn off all those firewall advance setting and packet filtering?
You can if you’d like. I didn’t notice a difference with them off. I currently have all of that turned off.
Just came to say THANKS for this video and it’s earlier companion video (the one for disabling WiFi on the 350 router, to make this happen)!
I do have a question, and I understand this may be a little subjective - what mesh system would you recommend to get the most out of your 1GB fiber? I have the Google WiFi router and I notice it drops signal strength significantly despite having 4 satellites placed around the house. I’m curious if a Netgear Orbi would be a dramatic improvement over this.
I can’t really give you a good answer because I’ve never used any mesh systems. However, my neighbor that is a savvy IT guy is super happy with his TP-Link Deco M9. His house is about 2500sq ft.
@@SPXLabs thanks again! Appreciate the insight.
Hey I was wondering would it work if I was using the bgw320 and use pass through to a separate wireless router for my room only? I use AT&Ts Wi-Fi extender to get Ethernet connection but noticed I’m paying $10 extra and it’s not giving me the full 1k up and down.
It's highly unlikely you will ever see 1Gpbs Up and Down. You can also use your own equipment regardless if you do IP Passthrough or not. If you use your own Wireless AP just remember to turn the wifi off on the BGW320
Is this what I would do if I want to set up a second dedicated accesspoint with a different name? Basically want to keep using the BGW for my normal devices like apple tv, phones, etc, and then a second router with only my gaming devices.
You don’t have to do this if you add a dedicated access point. If you use a second router you will probably want to do this if you have issues with NAT.
Can I use a Orbi CBR40 with ATT BGW210 in IP passthrough to connect my other satellites on wifi?
Yup
did u connect the satellite to the main orbi or to the att box?
Hi there, Excellent video! Question for you! I use Orbi RBR850 and instead of selecting DHCP fixed, I used DHCP dynamic and so far my connection has been working just fine. The only reason I decided to enable IP passthrough for my BGW320 is because my xbox detected a double NAT. After I made some setting adjustments on the BGW320, I re-ran the network configuration on the Xbox and the NAT type was now set to Open and Double NAT was gone. Should I continue to use DHCP dynamic?
Use whatever works!
Hi Stefano, I’m over here in Meridianville AL, I presently have the 2Gbps/2Gbps service. I am set to Passthrough mode and DHCP Dynamic. The reason for not using DHCP Fixed is I wanted my router to be given my real WAN IP address. The ATT box now passes the WAN IP address to my UniFi UXG instead of a 192.168.x.x address. Very helpful! I want to upgrade to the 5Gbps service but the UniFi UXG (and UDM Pro/SE) will rate limit to approximately 3.5 Gbps when IPS is enabled. I really want the 5Gbps service but trying to justify throwing away 1.5 Gbps due to the IPS overhead. Just an FYI. Thanks for your videos. 🍻
Weird that the SE would be slower than the older UDMP. I was seeing 4.5Gbp+ with IPS enabled on my old UDMP. Honestly though, what I do, is pay for 1Gbps and get 1.2~1.3Gbps because ATT over provisions their network. You just need the right SFP+ module. Relevant video ua-cam.com/video/nM0gFzDU9fo/v-deo.html
Thanks for the reply! My understanding is your UDM SE and my UXG-Pro-US have the same capabilities for IPS throughput. Great to hear that you can see 4.5Gbps when the IPS is enabled. Well not so great because it looks like I may need to upgrade. Lol. By the way, my ATT provided HUMAX BGW320-500 is synced up with my UNIFI UXG-Pro-US at 10 Gbps via Cat 6 RJ45. I’ll let you know if I take the plunge and upgrade to 5 Gbps service. 🍻
Yes I’m having the same problem with my Orbi connection on my Xbox it’s saying strict nat type 🤦🏻♂️ should I change it to dynamic?
Disable WIFI instructions
Home Network > Wi-Fi > Advanced Settings > Turn both 2.4/5 off.
Man, something up with internet connectivity. I signed up for ATT because with Sprectrum 1 GB plan I was only getting 400-500mb/s over WiFi using my gli net Flint2 router. So I get Fiber 1Gb plan and I only get 400-500mb/s over WiFi on the BGW210. The only time I’ve gotten like 979 mb/s is if I connect my Mac to my gli-net Flint2 router via Ethernet and have that router connect via WiFi to my BGW210. All day long I get 900+ mb/s like this. Any other way on any other device I’m only getting 400-500mb/s. Why is this? I was expecting to get 900+mb/s on anything I connect. And then when I do the speed test provided on the ATT app, it apparently get 1300+ through the fiber wire, but from my router to the items in my home it’s a 3rd of that. Why?
Hey Stefano, do you know if this works with the 5268AC Pace modem (that AT&T uses) as well?
I do not.
How do you disable the gateway’s WiFi so I can use my personal mesh router’s WiFi? In Device > Status, it lists my 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz as enabled, but there are no buttons to disable it.
ua-cam.com/video/AE3afzRyNDc/v-deo.htmlsi=qBsq12XJuIrLXW2O
When I go to Allocation Mode and change it to Passthrough, the Passthrough Mode field is greyed out displacing "Manual" and won't let me change it to DHCPS-fixed as you mentioned It also will not let me enter anything into the Passthrough Fixed MAC Address field. Any advice? Thanks!
After changing what you can try saving and then unplugging the gateway and then plug it back in. Try again. Never seen whatever problem you are havjng
Hi! So is double Nat over wifi on a phone something like this: testing the wifi speed I get full speed np. But loading some apps take time to load more than normal?
Network address translation (NAT) is a function that your router or gateway performs to create your network. NAT changes the wide area network (WAN) IP address that your Internet service provider (ISP) assigns you from public to private, which allows multiple devices in your network to share it. NAT also secures your network by blocking direct access to your local IP addresses. For more information, see What is NAT (Network Address Translation)?
Double NAT occurs when you connect your router to an ISP gateway or another router. Because NAT is performed by each router or gateway, your network is split into two different private networks. The devices connected to one private network might have communication problems with the devices connected to the other private network, and you might experience problems with:
1. Online games
2. VPN connections
3. Port forwarding and triggering
4. Secure websites that use SSL
Hello. I am trying for a month to make it working, my issue is that only broadcast packets are being passed... rest of the traffic is still handled by the bg... any ideas ?
There is no way to completely bypass the BGW320. This is by design so AT&T can charge customers a rental fee.
AT&T has not implemented true IP Passthrough.
This is a great video, thank you! How do I find the MAC address(es) of my UDM Pro? Are there different MAC addresses for each port? I want to use the SFP port (on the UDM Pro) with an appropriate adapter to the 5G port of the BGW 320-is this possible?
The UDMP only has one mac address which can be found in UniFi, on the box, or on the back of the device. ua-cam.com/video/nM0gFzDU9fo/v-deo.html&pp=ygUTc3B4IGxhYnMgdWRtIHBybyA1Zw%3D%3D
I have a BGW 320 and while the passthrough is working, NAT port forwarding trough to my my tp-link Archer BE800 is not. Anyone successfully troubleshoot this problem? Suggestions?
Thanks for the info. The setup worked. However.. is it possible to make my devices anonymous to the ATT router? I want my personal router to handle all the traffic and ISP to not know what device is connecting to what. Is this possible?
Yes. On your router create an ACL or firewall rule that blocks the att subnet from the rest of your network. However, create a rule that also allows your equipment to talk to the att router. A unidirectional connection if you will
Please help. Does the new router have to be next to the att router? Or can it be in another location from the fiber box
I have the same question can you get rid of the old AT&T modem?
@@luiscaudillo3500 I never figured out so I just got a long Ethernet cord
I work from home as a photoshop retoucher (20gb+ file sizes). I have 1gb fiber and ATT BGW 320-505. My company is getting me a Synology NAS to sync files back and forth in the background. I want to get a switch so I would have more ports. Do I need to re-configure the ATT BGW 320-505 when adding the switch?
Nope
With IP passthrough, does connecting devices directly to the BGW320 still work? For instance, if I do IP passthrough for my mesh wifi, can I still plug my desktop into another port on the back of the BGW320, or will it no longer NAT?
Yeah you can still plug other devices into the bgw320 and they obtain an IP address on the same subnet as the bgw 320.
@@SPXLabs So that's because it's IP Passthru and not bridge mode? Interesting. I might leave the AT&T's 2.4ghz online and use that for all my Wyzecams, the Nest etc that don't need to be on my actual LAN. That'll leave my primary 2.4ghz signal with less traffic.
@@JPDuffy I'm not entirely sure but probably. not a bad idea, it's worth a shot.
If I don’t have computer to connect, what should I do? Can iPhone work without actual connection to router?
If you have the patience I’m sure you can make it work.