hoosierdoc
Freed prisoner
I'm now the IT guy for my wife's dental practice. They want a wireless network that patients (and they) can use but I want it protected from ability to go from wireless to our wired network, for security purposes.
There is a netgear Prosafe FVS336Gv3 dual-wan router in the practice. There are three switches with plenty of open LAN ports. Is it possible to take the IP of the wireless router and lock it down to not have access to go anywhere but out to the cable modem?
Follow-up question: it is a dual-WAN router. currently only the cable modem input is used. I'd love an LTE backup device going into LAN2 as a failover if case comcast ever goes down. Problem is the phone system requires a static IP hard coded in, and that would change if comcast goes down. I can always change the IP on the hardware but I may not be local to do that. Can I just plug the LTE hotspot router into the WAN2 port and setup the router to use it as a failover if WAN1 dies? Don't want to burn the cellular data if we don't need it.
There is a netgear Prosafe FVS336Gv3 dual-wan router in the practice. There are three switches with plenty of open LAN ports. Is it possible to take the IP of the wireless router and lock it down to not have access to go anywhere but out to the cable modem?
Follow-up question: it is a dual-WAN router. currently only the cable modem input is used. I'd love an LTE backup device going into LAN2 as a failover if case comcast ever goes down. Problem is the phone system requires a static IP hard coded in, and that would change if comcast goes down. I can always change the IP on the hardware but I may not be local to do that. Can I just plug the LTE hotspot router into the WAN2 port and setup the router to use it as a failover if WAN1 dies? Don't want to burn the cellular data if we don't need it.