Adding time capsule to existing airport extreme base station

I have an AEBS (1st generation) connected to my internet modem at the WAN port (PPPoE) and a wireless network set up and running fine.
I've bought a Time Capsule (4th generation) to boost the signal of the wireless network at my bedroom and have a wireless backup.
But I can't seem to make it work!!!
Can someone point me out some precise steps I should follow or list of settings?
(Maybe I need to reset the TC so to erase the mistakes I made. If is that so, how can I do it?)
Thanks!
Edgar
PS: this is a Mac-only enviroment, running Snow Leopard.

Here you go ...
Dynamic WDS - Extending a Wireless Network Setup
If practical, place the base stations in near proximity to each other during the setup phase. Once done, move them to their desired locations.
Open AirPort Utility, and then, select the base station that will connect to the Internet.
Choose Manual Setup from the Base Station menu, or double-click the base station to open the configuration in a separate window. Enter the base station password if necessary.
Click AirPort in the toolbar, and then, click Wireless.
Choose “Create a wireless network” from the Wireless Mode pop-up menu, and then, select the “Allow this network to be extended” checkbox.
Next, select the base station that will extend this network, and then, choose Manual Setup from the Base Station menu, or double-click the base station to open its configuration in a separate window. Enter the base station password if necessary.
Choose “Extend a wireless network” from the Wireless Mode pop-up menu, and then, choose the network you want to extend from the Network Name pop-up menu.
Enter the base station network and base station password if necessary.
Click Update to update the base station with new network settings.
(ref: Pages 43-44 of Apple AirPort Networks.)
(ref: Wi-Fi base stations: Extending the range of your wireless network by adding additional Wi-Fi base stations)

Similar Messages

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  • TIme Capsule 2TB and Airport Express Base Station

    Hi,
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    Message was edited by: dannykite
    Message was edited by: dannykite

    This looks like you held down the "option" key while you clicked on the Airport icon at the top of your screen.
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    apikoros wrote:
    The Utility transferred all of the AE's settings, so I still have to change the password, which leaves me with only 2 other questions, I think:
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    2)  Who's the treasonous SOB who spilled the beans to you about the ICBM in my back yard?!?
    N.Korean hackers.
    [Edit] Whoops-- one more question:  I want to partition the TC's disk, but Disk Utility doesn't see it.  What do I need to do?
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    Is it possible to quantify how much faster USB back up is compared to 802.11ac between mac and AirPort time capsule?
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    The real world speed of USB3 is around 100MB/s to a spinning hard disk..
    http://www.macworld.com/article/2039427/how-fast-is-usb-3-0-really-.html
    which may indicate the limit is the actual disk speed. In bits per second you x 8.. so the USB3 is 800Mbps. The advantage of USB direct connection is that speed is available at all time. Not when your close or the load on wireless is low.
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    So if the computer is using resources on a local router.. and only one wireless hop then it is fast.
    If it is using resources via a second router so wireless goes.. computer--- router2----router1-- resource.
    Your speed drops 50% at best.. at worst it is really bad.
    For example.. computer 1 on router 1 accesses computer 2 hard disk on router2 with everything wireless.
    Count the hops. C1-R1, R1-R2, R2-C2
    That gives 3 hops. So each packet is transmitted.. along that chain.. each transmission can only begin after it is received in full. Now add some other computers using resources.. say C3 is using internet via R1.. that has to be time sliced. So you get 50% of 50% of 50% of 50%. It is obvious that wireless networks have a huge handicap.. they cannot transmit and receive at the same time.. nor can they talk to more than one client at a time.. so add time slicing to wireless hopping.
    Now ethernet is entirely different. It can transmit and receive at the same time.. ie is duplex. And in a switch it can talk to several computers at the same time. That is why we say.. as much as you can ethernet.. and use wireless as the last single hop to a client that needs it.. ie iphone or ipad.. or laptop if you cannot plug in ethernet.
    Can the ac wifi format be extended using AirPort Extreme and time capsule.
    Over very short range yes. AC wireless is only on 5ghz and is poor penetration of solids.. so this will work but maybe only to the next room.

  • Older airport extreme base station as a network extender with new time capsule

    I just bought a new time capsule (802.11ac). Can my older airport extreme base station (model A1143) be used as a network extender with it?

    Yes, although it maybe disappointing..
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    Or using ethernet to the old extreme and set it in bridge.. You can then setup roaming network... this is much better.. but getting ethernet to the right place could be messy or expensive or both.
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    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4145
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  • Time Capsule vs. Airport Extreme & external HDD

    Hullo all. For time capsule backups, i am either going to purchase a 1tb time capsule unit or an external usb drive to use with an airport extreme base station's usb port. Wondering if someone more knowledgeable than i knows if either choice offers a transfer speed advantage over the other.
    Also, if i go with the external usb drive option then i'd like to employ a usb hub so that when necessary i can also run my printer off of the same airport's usb port. Would anybody know if this would work okay, without compromising backup speed and quality?
    Thanks!

    artdlr007 wrote:
    Of course - that is the essence of my question: what's faster, time capsule or an AEBS and fast usb external drive. And is the speed difference significant.
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    From the Macworld review of Time Capsule:
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    That's right. Real transfer times are lower than 100Mbps Ethernet, on a par with 802.11g wireless, and well below USB 2.0.
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    howto - extending airport 802.11n networks
    Pre-Requistites
    1) Ensure all have most recent firmware - 7.7.3 for AC devices, 7.6.4 for 802.11n devices
    2) Have most recent Airport Utility (OS X 10.7 thru 10.9, use 6.3.2, IOS6/7 use 1.3.3)
    3) Only have the Primary Airport/TimeCapsule powered on for now
    Set up the Primary/Anchor Airport Base Station
    1) Do this over ethernet - ensure that the Modem and TimeCapsule/Airport is connected on the WAN port
    2) You'll be prompted by Airport Utility to name the Network and the Base Station
    Network is the SSID of the Wireless LAN
    BaseStation is the name of the Airport/TimeCapsule
    3) You'll be prompted for a password - this will be for both the WLAN and the Base Station on initial setup
    Note here - there are at least three passwords to worry about post setup
    a) BaseStation Management - in this how-to, this will be carried thru to the extended basestations
    b) WLAN Access
    c) Disk Access for TimeCapsule and AirDisk
    They can be same or unique, up to you...
    Configure the Airport/TimeCapsule for WiFi/Network
    4) Select the named BS in Airport Utility - click the 'edit' button
    5) Review 'Base Station' Tab
    5a) BaseStation Name
    5b) BaseStation Password - you can change this now if desired, this does not affect WLAN password
    6) Review Internet Tab
    6a) set as appropriate for your network - e.g DHCP or other depending on needs
    6aa) focus here is getting the primary BS set up first
    6b) Click Internet Options - this is IPV6 setup - for now...
    6ba) Set to Link-Local Only, click save, you can go back and change this later if needed
    7) Go to Wireless Tab
    7a) Set Network Mode to "Create a wireless network"
    7b) Check Wireless Network Name
    7c) Wireless Security - recommend WPA2 Personal - this is important as you'll need this later
    7d) Wireless Password - the password entered in step 5b above is what is used here, feel free to modify or not - if so, note this
    7e) disregard Enable Guest Network for now
    7f) Click Wireless Options
    7g) ensure 5Ghz network name is unselected
    7h) Country as appropriate - since I'm in California, I choose United States
    7i) Leave 2.4Ghz and 5Ghz Channels as "Automatic" for now, click save if needed
    8) Click Network Tab
    8a) if this is your primary router - use DHCP and NAT
    8b) Click Network Options
    8c) DHCP Lease - I use 12 hours
    8d) IPv4 DHCP Range - every here is a bit different, but my recommendation for most folks
    192.168.1.100 to 150
    Use what works for you, keeping in mind that the AP Extreme, TimeCapsule, and 2012 Airport Express can handle 50 clients, max
    8e) Ensure that Enable NAT Port Mapping Protocol is selected
    8f) can worry about Enable default host at: [] later, this is the DMZ'ed host
    8g) can choose to enable IGMP Snooping or not - doesn't affect the primary setup
    8h) click save
    TimeCapsule Only - for Airport Extreme, worry about AirDisk later
    This is TimeMachine support, along with FileShares
    9) Select Disks - you should see a partitiion named "Data"
    9a) ensure that Enable file sharing is selected
    9b) ensure that Share disks over WAN is unchecked for now
    9c) Secure Shared Disks:
    Choices here -
    device password - noted in step 5b above
    disk password - this will be for all LAN clients that can see the Data Partitiion
    accounts - you can set up separate users and passwords - this is beyond scope of this how-to
    Recommendation if using as TimeMachine only, use a disk password - note this as you'll need it for timemachine on the clients
    Save Settings to the Airport/TimeCapsule
    10) Click the "update' button
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    Everything now should show green and shiny - open a web browser and attempt to go to Apple/Google/Yahoo, to ensure that you've got network connectivity
    Reviewing things in the Airport 6.3 utility, you should see your base station and the Internet - both with green status
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    Note - again, it helps to be connected to the primary base station on ethernet, wireless makes things, erm, challenging
    11) with another decive - Mac/iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch or PC, ensure that Wireless LAN is working on the primary AP/Basestation
    Once this is done, then proceed to the next step
    Enable the "Extended" Airport - can be another TimeCapsule, Airport Express or Airport Extreme
    For purposes of this discussion - assume all ore 802.11n capable at a minimum, so this applies towards more recent gear
    a) Airport Extreme AC (2013)
    b) Airport TimeCapsule AC (2013)
    c) Airport Express 2012 Dual-Band (Looks like AppleTV)
    d) Airport Extreme 802.11n 5th Gen, TimeCapsule 4th Gen
    e) Airport Express 802.11n - similar to the 802.11g variant, looks like a MacBook Pro power adapter
    Assumptions here is that the extended airport is factory defaults - see link below for more info:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3728
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    after about a minute or so, you should see a blinking orange light, this is normal...
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    16) Should see "setting up this base station to wirelessly extend..."
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    For advanced features - such as port forwarding, DMZ, IPv6 Tunnels, Back to my Mac, etc - perform this only on the Primary Base station outlined in steps 1 thru 8h
    Good Luck!

  • Trying to connect a NetGear Wifi Range Extender to my existing Wifi. I have an Airport Extreme Base Station and I am also connected to a Vonage Phone Router. Any help would be appreciated?

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    The netgear is not going to work very well.. and not at all unless it is universal wireless extender.. you cannot use WDS method.
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    Thanks again,
    -- Philip

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