Hello,
I'm currently programming my routers.
And I can't access my configuration settings.
See the link to better understand my setup
with my IP addresses.
If you could help me so I can access the configuration settings on my Raspberry Pi, for example,
how do I do it with my laptop (10.192.17.80)?
Thank you for your help.
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/15-SRNngrOyk11DhFZfahUvBDwE_XIyfS...
Luc
VE2LUQ

73's
Luc
VE2LUQ
network switches, AREDN, Mikrotik ac3 router on top of mountains.
Hi, Luc:
Pshew! That is a lot of topics without much information.
1. Why is the Cudy TR3000 a supernode .vs. a default AREDN router?
2. "CUDY TR3000 via 5GHz dishes" makes no sense.
A Cudy TR3000 is unlikely to use a 'dish' antenna.
The Cudy is an indoor device and dish antennas are for outdoors.
3. "Repeater" systems—currently 4 repeaters"
Please tell us a little more about the systems.
Make and model and what is their purpose, RF band, protocol, ...
Who or what are they repeating?
4. "Before, I used "Network SWITCHES,"
Where...at home or at the mountain top?
What devices did this network switch? AREDN? Amateur Radio UHF repeaters?
ALLSTAR, DMR, ...?
5. "these are Mikrotik AC3 routers that I will put on top of the mountains."
Why are you putting indoor devices on top of a mountain?
73, Chuck
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1jyATwiHew85OEorfRROfd_efhn7PI1lm...
image #5 https://www.arednmesh.org/comment/25923#comment-25923
My queries: 1 ... 5: https://www.arednmesh.org/comment/25920#comment-25920
Hi, Luc:
Sorry, I am not familiar with 'RING'.
I recall 'token ring' from 20+ years ago when I when I studied for my CompTIA Networking+ certification.
1. You did not reply to my query 1.
Please mention something about why the Cudy is an AREDN supernode as
opposed to an AREDN regular node.
2. In the images in '#5' I see a '5 GHz dish radio' next to an IP network switch.
Please tell me more about how this 'dish radio' connects to a network switch.
Does the 'dish radio' have an IP address?
If yes, how does it get it?
Please share a link that will show configuration and/or specification of this 'dish radio'.
Does every 'dish radio' and every camera and every repeater and every Raspberry Pi
have its own IP address?
If yes, then is every network device at home and on the mountains in same /24 LAN?
3. In the images in '#5' I think I see an icon representing a repeater.
Does this repeater get an IP address?
If yes, how does it get it?
Please tell more about this repeater and how it relates to IP networking.
Do the cameras get IP addresses? If yes, how (static or dynamic or)?
Do the Raspberry Pis get IP addresses? If yes, how (static or dynamic or)?
4. I see icons of basic network switches. Thank you.
5. "To fully understand our system, we've been using 5GHz dish radios since 2012, and they work very well."
5a. Why are asking about AREDN networking?
5b. Is there some service you want to add that you do not have?
5c. Adding AREDN or switching to AREDN can move each site into a separate LAN/29 segment, but
each LAN/29 segment can reach the other LAN/29 segments due to AREDN routing.
Each AREDN device is not simply a network switch, it is also a network router.
5d. I notice icons representing a 'sector' style antenna.
Is that the repeater's antenna?
Is that another AREDN radio with a sector 'downlink' antenna to another home AREDN station?
73, Chuck
https://docs.arednmesh.org/en/latest/arednHow-toGuides/supernodes.html
Thank you for your information
Luc
VE2LUQ
https://docs.arednmesh.org/en/latest/arednHow-toGuides/supernodes.html
Thank you for your information
Luc
VE2LUQ
73's
Luc
VE2LUQ
https://docs.arednmesh.org/en/latest/arednHow-toGuides/supernodes.html "
Hi, Luc:
I do not understand why you begin with a supernode.
I do not see how the Cudy nor a supernode helps to build your network.
In your image in
https://www.arednmesh.org/content/tcpip
you have 3 residential-grade indoor-rated routers in series. This does not seem logical.
I do not understand why you have the Cudy router in your network. I see no purpose or benefit.
I expected your home router's WAN to be connected to your ISP's modem and have a 192.168.x.x LAN network.
From your home router, I expected your next router to be an indoor rated device like a Mikrotik-hAP-ac3 with AREDN firmware and
to see a 10.x.x.x/(/29 or /28 or /27) LAN network.
I expected to see a home workstation (?laptop?) connected to and getting an IP address from the (?hap-ac3?) AREDN router.
I expected to see the home AREDN router DtD connected to a commercial-grade outdoor-rated router such as a
Ubiquiti PBE-M5-400 with AREDN firmware.
I did not expect to see the word 'antenna' mentioned anywhere.
Of course, if you plan to convert this existing large LAN/24 network to AREDN,
you will need to start at the most remote sites and move toward your home.
73, Chuck
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1_uS1GthipCa_t3N1y0wfPbuOv-4rOqv6...
Luc VE2LUQ
Very close.
I would retain your non-AREDN home router you had in your earlier slides.
Keep your household devices including your wife's computer on home router.
The LAN of the home router goes to the WAN of your hap-ac3.
On your remote nodes you can reprogram the hap-ac3 to have
2 DtD (pbe-m5-400) and 3 LAN (VoIP repeater, camera and RPi) ports.
You wont need WAN ports on the remote sites.
If you need 6 devices: 3 nodes, camera, RPi, and repeater,
you may need an additional (? 5 port ?) switch.
Instead of a hap-ac3 at each remote site, perhaps a 5 or 8 port VLAN switch would do.
73, Chuck
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1p_8s00x-Ck0FoVAmFjEnip-li_X0QH4f...
73's
Luc
VE2LUQ
There is no need to be on the same 'IP address range' as at home.
You can have access to all addresses in all AREDN nodes just like
you can have access to all IP addresses in the internet.
AREDN nodes are routers...
like your home router links your home to all internet addresses...
all your linked AREDN nodes link to all local AREDN nodes and all AREDN nodes' IP addresses.
And,...
just like your home router can instantly convert google.com and facebook.com
to IP addresses,
your AREDN network can instantly convert advertised server and service names
to IP addresses.
There is no need to have every device in the same LAN/24 address range.
73, Chuck