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<tt>Hey guys,<br>
<br>
I've just been asked to help a restaurant with their network. They
have 1 network for their employees in their office, then they have
another for the restaurant customers to get wifi access on their
phones/laptops.<br>
<br>
Of course, these 2 connections should be separated and they are.
As they already had a relationship with Qwest, I had to get a
block of static ips to accommodate; this is the general
break-down:<br>
<br>
Office LAN | Customer WiFi<br>
PubIP: 55.44.33.22 reserved gateway | </tt><tt>PubIP:
55.44.33.23 assignable ip<br>
Subnet Mask: 255.255.255.248 | </tt><tt>Subnet Mask:
255.255.255.248<br>
GW: it finds the qwest gw | </tt><tt>GW: </tt><tt>55.44.33.22<br>
</tt><tt>
Dynamic DNS Addresses from ISP | </tt><tt>
Dynamic DNS Addresses from ISP</tt><tt><br>
</tt><tt>Priv: 10.0.1.0/24 | </tt><tt>Priv:
10.0.1.0/24<br>
<br>
I know this is very little information. I've rounded out the
picture <a
href="http://forums.speedguide.net/showthread.php?278495-2-Separate-Networks-in-the-Same-business">here</a>.
<br>
<br>
The basic problem is that if both networks can see one another,
they both work fine. If I them both set (as above), and they are
separated but - </tt><tt>performance of </tt><tt>both networks
quickly degrades down to zero.<br>
<br>
I must have done this dozens of times and I can't seem to find
what I'm omitting this time. If anyone can help I would greatly
appreciate it.<br>
</tt>
<pre class="moz-signature" cols="72"><tt>--
Talk to you soon,
Todd E Thomas
C: 515.778.6913
"It's a frail music knits the world together."
-Robert Dana
</tt></pre>
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