I got my ISP to put my modem into bridge mode, so it acts as ONLY a modem. I have my own router, which is on 192.168.0.x with DHCP on and some static IP assignments. Everything works fine. But my modem is on a different subnet, and honestly it changes. It WAS 192.168.40.x but I THINK now it’s 192.168.100.x - I have no control over it, it’s my ISP that changes it and I have no idea why.

What I want to do is to be able to access my modem management interface so I can see if it’s connected to the internet (for troubleshooting, when my internet fails - is it my modem? router? etc.) I can’t do that from a PC on the 192.168.0.x subnet obviously. But it’s really annoying to physically connect a PC to the modem and set static IPs GUESSING at what subnet the modem management portal is on.

Any advice? Ideally, I’d love for a way to access the management portal from any PC anytime… I guess the solution there would be to put everything on the same subnet? More difficult than it seems when ISP decides to change it on a whim.

As an aside, I tried setting a static IP on a laptop hard-wired into the modem just now and neither 192.16.100.1 nor 192.168.40.1 were allowing me into the modem’s management portal so now I’m at a loss. That said… this was while my modem was connected to my router still via a different LAN port. Do I have to disconnect all other LAN ports before it will work? Or has the modem’s subnet changed AGAIN?

Thanks for your help.

  • absolutxtr@alien.topOPB
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    10 months ago

    Tried not 40.1 and 100.1 with 40.2 and 100.2 manually set IPs on a hardwired laptop. Neither worked.

    Maybe some other user error? Should I not have set a default gateway while setting manual IP? Should I have disconnected modem from router before trying to access? Point is I wanna be able to access it to see what it’s saying with less hassle. Doesn’t seem like there’s a silver bullet for me.

    • bchiodini@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      Try setting your ethernet interface to get its IP address via DHCP. Let it get the default route from the modem, then see if you can access 192.168.40.1.

      I took a quick look at what happens in my router when accessing my modem. It looks like the modem intercepts its own traffic. It should have been forwarded to my default router, but the default router shouldn’t know anything about the modem. I’ll get a packet capture when I get a chance.