Hey there! I'm new, sorry if this is the wrong place for this.
I am starting to share Internet access with neighbors because of the expense in our area and the fact that we don't have a lot of money. I only have one pilot project going now, but 2 to 3 other LANs worth
of neighbors interested.
Problem is... well, this is my pilot project, where I learn stuff, right? Well things are breaking and it's threatening the project. My pilot project is a point-to-point link from a "head end" (for the neighbors) router in my house to a wifi-to-ethernet bridge in a good spot on the neighbors' house, which then sends traffic via ethernet cable to an access point.
The problem is that the bridge I have has god-awful proprietary firmware. I used it fine for years as an access point, but as the reverse, it locks up every 8-12 hours and needs to be power cycled. I need to replace this FAST because they are getting unhappy.
The stock firmware for the DIR-615 (the potential replacement bridge) does not do any kind of "WDS." The DIR-655 also doesn't include "WDS" function in its firmware. I need the bridge to relay broadcast traffic such that the equipment on my side and on their side is all on the same subnet. Does anyone know how hard this may be on the DIR-615 running OpenWRT? I tried a relayd-based bridge on some other piece of equipment and the networks were still separate; I'm not sure why, but I've had so much bad luck so far with this project (plus noob mistakes) that I'm sure I set it up wrong.
If a DIR-615 can't handle the job, we need an INEXPENSIVE used N300 option which can, and which can survive existing in a damp basement - running hot is actually a good thing in this case. I would like to use OpenWRT on it as a "STA bridge" no matter what I get, unless there is something out there I can get used that is known to work w/stock firmware as a STA bridge with the DIR-655 and is extremely reliable. My current device has such a mode but locks up as I mentioned. External antennas preferred but I can deal if not available.
I have a Netgear WNR2000 v3 laying around (OpenWRT support seems really dodgy) and a Rosewill RNX-N360RT (it's some kind of clone of a TP-Link, thought there was OpenWRT and now confused), and also I could use a Raspberry Pi + a USB N300 device, if there were a compelling reason to do so, though I'd need to wait on shipping for said USB device.
Can anyone advise? These folks aren't really techies and have no idea what a learning curve this is (and I've already done some hotspots and things before) - to them it's wireless, it should Just Work.
I am starting to share Internet access with neighbors because of the expense in our area and the fact that we don't have a lot of money. I only have one pilot project going now, but 2 to 3 other LANs worth

Problem is... well, this is my pilot project, where I learn stuff, right? Well things are breaking and it's threatening the project. My pilot project is a point-to-point link from a "head end" (for the neighbors) router in my house to a wifi-to-ethernet bridge in a good spot on the neighbors' house, which then sends traffic via ethernet cable to an access point.
The problem is that the bridge I have has god-awful proprietary firmware. I used it fine for years as an access point, but as the reverse, it locks up every 8-12 hours and needs to be power cycled. I need to replace this FAST because they are getting unhappy.
- The "head end" is a D-Link DIR-655 running latest stock firmware (it can't run open firmware). It has two 2.4GHz yagis aimed at the bridge.
- The bridge is what I need to replace. My existing option for that is a D-Link DIR-615; everything else spare is 802.11g and n is performing quite well WHEN the bridge isn't locked up.
The stock firmware for the DIR-615 (the potential replacement bridge) does not do any kind of "WDS." The DIR-655 also doesn't include "WDS" function in its firmware. I need the bridge to relay broadcast traffic such that the equipment on my side and on their side is all on the same subnet. Does anyone know how hard this may be on the DIR-615 running OpenWRT? I tried a relayd-based bridge on some other piece of equipment and the networks were still separate; I'm not sure why, but I've had so much bad luck so far with this project (plus noob mistakes) that I'm sure I set it up wrong.
If a DIR-615 can't handle the job, we need an INEXPENSIVE used N300 option which can, and which can survive existing in a damp basement - running hot is actually a good thing in this case. I would like to use OpenWRT on it as a "STA bridge" no matter what I get, unless there is something out there I can get used that is known to work w/stock firmware as a STA bridge with the DIR-655 and is extremely reliable. My current device has such a mode but locks up as I mentioned. External antennas preferred but I can deal if not available.
I have a Netgear WNR2000 v3 laying around (OpenWRT support seems really dodgy) and a Rosewill RNX-N360RT (it's some kind of clone of a TP-Link, thought there was OpenWRT and now confused), and also I could use a Raspberry Pi + a USB N300 device, if there were a compelling reason to do so, though I'd need to wait on shipping for said USB device.
Can anyone advise? These folks aren't really techies and have no idea what a learning curve this is (and I've already done some hotspots and things before) - to them it's wireless, it should Just Work.

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