08-13-2024 12:18 AM
Solved! Solved! Go to Solution.
08-13-2024 12:29 PM
@LordDrakkon No, not really. Comcast designed their set-top boxes to work hand-in-hand with the gateway as an integrated turnkey solution. They do not (officially) support their set-top boxes connecting to 3rd-party network gear.
@timpayne This is going to be a constant problem for you unless you configure Ignite Gateway with the same Wi-Fi network name and passphrase that you use in your external network gear, even if you are running it in Bridge Mode.
Here is what is going on: If the Ignite set-top box loses Wi-Fi connectivity (e.g. when you upgrade firmware in your Wi-Fi router and reboot it) it will contact a service on the Ignite Gateway (via a hidden Wi-Fi network), authenticate with Rogers' back-end systems to determine/confirm the account that it belongs to, and will then obtain the Wi-Fi credentials that were configured in your Ignite Gateway. Comcast designed it this way to make it easy to install new set-top boxes -- you just power them on and they automagically connect -- and to allow the set-top boxes to seamlessly reconnect to the network if you should change your Wi-Fi password.
If you put your Ignite Gateway into Bridge Mode, its internal services are still running and the set-top box can (and will) still contact the "Lost and Found" service on the Gateway to figure out which Wi-Fi service it should connect to. If you have a different Wi-Fi name and passphrase in your network gear (and the credentials configured in the Ignite Gateway are not active on any nearby Wi-Fi network), the set-top box will drop off of Wi-Fi and will not re-connect.
If you simply configure your Wi-Fi gear with the same Wi-Fi credentials that are configured in your Ignite Gateway, the set-top box will remain connected to your Wi-Fi AP. Also, if you should ever need tech support and need to revert back to a Rogers-supported configuration, all that you need to do is disable Bridge Mode on the Ignite Gateway and power-off your Wi-Fi router.
08-13-2024 08:25 AM
08-13-2024 12:29 PM
@LordDrakkon No, not really. Comcast designed their set-top boxes to work hand-in-hand with the gateway as an integrated turnkey solution. They do not (officially) support their set-top boxes connecting to 3rd-party network gear.
@timpayne This is going to be a constant problem for you unless you configure Ignite Gateway with the same Wi-Fi network name and passphrase that you use in your external network gear, even if you are running it in Bridge Mode.
Here is what is going on: If the Ignite set-top box loses Wi-Fi connectivity (e.g. when you upgrade firmware in your Wi-Fi router and reboot it) it will contact a service on the Ignite Gateway (via a hidden Wi-Fi network), authenticate with Rogers' back-end systems to determine/confirm the account that it belongs to, and will then obtain the Wi-Fi credentials that were configured in your Ignite Gateway. Comcast designed it this way to make it easy to install new set-top boxes -- you just power them on and they automagically connect -- and to allow the set-top boxes to seamlessly reconnect to the network if you should change your Wi-Fi password.
If you put your Ignite Gateway into Bridge Mode, its internal services are still running and the set-top box can (and will) still contact the "Lost and Found" service on the Gateway to figure out which Wi-Fi service it should connect to. If you have a different Wi-Fi name and passphrase in your network gear (and the credentials configured in the Ignite Gateway are not active on any nearby Wi-Fi network), the set-top box will drop off of Wi-Fi and will not re-connect.
If you simply configure your Wi-Fi gear with the same Wi-Fi credentials that are configured in your Ignite Gateway, the set-top box will remain connected to your Wi-Fi AP. Also, if you should ever need tech support and need to revert back to a Rogers-supported configuration, all that you need to do is disable Bridge Mode on the Ignite Gateway and power-off your Wi-Fi router.
08-15-2024 08:06 AM
@-G- thanks for the detailed response! The STB's continue to function - I could leave it as is. Though they are Wi-fi 5 devices, I thought by hopping on the new router they might benefit slightly from the faster processor in the new router. I have Chromecast (w/Google TV, also Wi-fi 5) devices and 4K playback in YouTube seems greatly improved. I want to change SSID - I may try unbridging and setting the gateway to the new SSID/passkey then re-bridging (router off while I do that).