![]() ![]() True? I probably won't even be able to tell though if the devices I'm using on it are the bottleneck for speed anyway. This older router might be a standard, plain version of DD-WRT.Īnd from that other post, potentially anything connecting to this older router will be slowed down. Would it matter which version of DD-WRT are on both, ie Do they need to match or are slightly different versions of DD-WRT ok? My main DD-WRT access point is running on a Kong version of DD-WRT. It should be a simple set up from what I read before. So this older router would need to connect by wifi to the other DD-WRT router and pass all of its DHCP requests through the first DD-WRT router to the firewall/DHCP box. DHCP is handled by a separate firewall/DHCP box in front of my main DD-WRT access point now. Then any device within range of this older router could connect to it. This old router with DD-WRT on it will connect to my main DD-WRT access point by wifi only. I thought I did this before but I can't find my notes today. ![]() The version 3 is important I remember, either for being to handle DD-WRT or the version of DD-WRT to use. ![]() ![]() I searched in the past and this router will work with DD-WRT for sure. I'd rather have DD-WRT on it, and then I'll have it as back up in case my main DD-WRT router dies on me. The firmware on the old router is from 2009. It probably won't do much and might even slow wifi down, but I'm still interested in doing this. I have an old router I want to stick DD-WRT on and stick it as far from my main DD-WRT access point as possible. I've got a firewall/DCHP box going to my DD-WRT access point. ![]()
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