Extend my Time Capsule (Dual Band) network

Hi, I need to extend my Time Capsule (Dual Band) network as currently the Time Capsule is downstairs connected to a modem and I need to connect my Blu-ray player via ethernet to the internet which is upstairs.
I came across the following article from Apple http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4259 if I follow this will I be able to use the ethernet ports on the AEBS?
Also do I need to purchase an AEBS or is there another router i.e. Linksys or D-Link?
Cheers

Apple's "extend a wireless network" will enable the ethernet ports on the "remote" device in addition to providing more wireless coverage in the area where the remote device will be located.
Be sure to check to make sure that there will be a good wireless signal where the "remote" device is to be located by moving your laptop to the proposed location and logging on the wireless to make sure that you get a good, stable internet connection.
If you cannot get a good wireless signal at this location, you'll need to look at an ethernet connection method to allow communications between the devices.
It is extremely unlikely that the "extend" setup would work with devices from other manufacturers, so it would be wise to stay with the same manufacturer on any type of "main" and "remote" wireless setup.

Similar Messages

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    Back in January 2009, I bought my first Mac (MacBook) and a Time Capsule. Getting hooked on Macs, I now also own a iMac and consider myself a Mac Lover.
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    Hi
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    See my answer to your other post.

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    Apple needs to create a configuration tool that configures all the Apple devices one owns by creating a network diagram using drag and drop symbols...
    Sounds like a cool suggestion. If you want Apple to hear it, go to www.apple.com/feedback/timecapsule.html

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    Here is my little story.
    I had an airport extreme, with a usb disk holding my iTunes library. I run two tv's (wirelessly) and things were fine. At times iTunes would give me a spinning beach ball, but streaming tv shows and movies to the tv,s worked well.
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    Being an apple tragic and living 650 klm's from my wife and children, I convinced myself that I needed a new toy, so of to the apple shop (150 klm's away) to get the new dual band extreme. I didn't even think of the firmware issue, thinking the new one would just work!!!
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    I reverted to plugging in the usb disk and running iTunes via the TC to the usb drive, again no luck, stop start streaming.
    I then plugged the usb disk into my laptop and surprises surprise, streaming via network to tv was flawless, like my good old days.
    Not a long term solution, I have spent two days reading all the posts on 7.4.1, TC and tv.
    Tonight I hooked up the extreme, connected it via cable to the TC, turned off the extreme radio and plugged the usb disk in to the extreme. the extreme is running 7.3.x.
    Pointed iTunes to the library on the usb disk, sat down and watched the episode of Damages.
    Amazingly this arrangement works, and streaming is smooth.
    Now I am no tech wizard, but something is clearly amiss with 7.4.1 and disks.
    If anyone knows away to get the TC playing nice with streaming to the tv then it would be nice to hear, otherwise ebay will have to wait for the old extreme!
    Anyway just wanted to share, after many frustrating hours.

    Good post thanks for that. I agree something is wrong with 7.4.1 on both extreme and express as well. I had a lot of problems extending my network and only managed to fix things by reverting back to 7.3.x
    I'm planning no getting TC and appletv soon, so l'm hoping the a revised software update emerges before then. It looks like you've had some real dramas.
    Good luck.

  • Time Capsule Dual Band Mode Connection Timeout

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    Apple needs to create a configuration tool that configures all the Apple devices one owns by creating a network diagram using drag and drop symbols...
    Sounds like a cool suggestion. If you want Apple to hear it, go to www.apple.com/feedback/timecapsule.html

  • Time Capsule dual band version

    How can i understood if Time capsule 1 Tb is new version (dual band) or not?
    I can't open the box!!
    TKS

    If you can see the box, the new one is clearly marked "dual band". If you don't see this clearly, you are looking at the older version of the Time Capsule.

  • Is My Time Capsule Dual Band?

    Hey guys I have a 500GB Capsule and I was wondering if anyone can tell me if its dual band? I cant seem to find that info anywhere. My model number is A1254 Thanks

    This is model is the single band version.

  • Airport/Time Capsule dual-Band 802.11n wi-fi

    I have new macbook laptop. +Dell XPS 420 desktop Vista. I use Mediacom Cable modem , I purchased new Time Capsule/Airport A77262. Internet works on Dell and internet works on laptop.
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    Try connecting the Mac to the Airport with an Ethernet cable, turn off the wireless on the Mac as well and then run the Airport Utility, you should be able to configure it.
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  • Will I be able to extend a dual band network from a Time Capsule 2nd generation with the new Airport Express on both bands?

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    If I replace my existing Airport Express with the new one, will I be able to extend my network on both bands?

    It sounds like you may have configured your Time Capsule to use a separate name for the 5 GHz network and then setup the Express to extend that specific band.
    In order to extend both bands, the Time Capsule setup will need to be changed so that both bands are using the same name. In other words, you would uncheck the option for the 5 Ghz name.
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  • Dual Band Network: Time Capsule (N only) and Linksys (B/G) Works *Long*

    Ok, so this was more tedious than I thought it would be, but things actually seem to be working at this point.
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    Time Capsule: 1000BaseT wired, and 802.11N 5Ghz only wireless
    Linksys: 100BaseT wired, and 802.11G 2.4Ghz wireless
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    Time Capsule v. 7.3
    I set Time Capsule up first, following the step by step directions for "Create a wireless network"
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    WPA2 Personal
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    I disabled Airport
    I logged in to 192.168.1.1 using blank for login, admin for password (default for Linksys)
    I did the following:
    1) Confirmed Internet Connection Type was "Automatic Configuration-DHCP"
    2) Changed Network Setup to "DHCP Server-DISABLED"
    3) Turned off the Firewall settings in Security (not sure if this is necessary)
    4) Changed the Operating Mode from "GATEWAY" to "ROUTER"
    5)Changed the SSID to "LinksysG_ONLY" or something like that
    After each one of these steps, I had to save the configuration, thru the Linksys browser interface-which blows.
    6) Finally, I changed the Local IP Address of the Linksys from 192.168.1.1 to 10.0.1.251 (thanks to Henry B. for that)
    7) And....I no longer had access to the Linksys at all! This stumped me for a while, until...
    8) I checked my Ethernet settings (in System Preferences/Network): 192.168.1.1 was set as default router address. But my Router (at least for configuration purposes) was now 10.0.1.251, so it could no longer find it.
    9) So I added a new Ethernet port (using the "+" sign), called it Ethernet-Linksys. Set it to Manual. Put in an IP of 10.0.1.250, and a Router IP of 10.0.1.251.
    10) I got access to the Linksys setup page again! (Note: I'm sure there is an easier way to do this, but this is how I got mine to work )
    11) I set up WPA security again, set it to an unused channel (2 in my case), mixed b/g network.
    12) Finally, I moved the ethernet cable from my MacBook directly to one of the ethernet ports on the Time Capsule. I did NOT hook up the other end to the WAN on the Linksys (which for some reason I had done 100 times before) I left it in one of the 4 ethernet ports on the Linksys. Repeat, the WAN (ethernet) port remains empty.
    13) I then turned Airport back on the MacBook, connected to "LinksysG_ONLY", and...I was online. And everything seems to work.

    Hi kjk et al,
    I've been searching the boards for something like what you have described in such nice detail. Before Time Capsule, I used a Netgear g router connected to the cable modem and an older Apple base station connected to the Netgear as a bridge. I removed the Netgear and set up my Time Capsule as the primary. The newer computers in my network can access the Time Capsule, but the old Dell with a 802.11g wireless card cannot. I don't remember seeing where I could access TC to change a setting of "N only" or b/g, but I am guessing that it is running N.
    I tried to follow the steps you used for Linksys. The pre-step 1 thing, resetting it "10 times to get it to work" - how do you know when it is really reset? With Netgear plugged into electricity, I stuck a paper clip into the hole labeled on the diagram as "restore factory settings" and watched the color of the IO icon change from green to amber to green. I did it again for good measure.
    I plugged ethernet from PowerBook G4 into Netgear not-WAN ethernet ports (like your MacBook to Linksys). I disabled Airport. Using Safari, I logged into 192.168.0.1 and got to the Netgear SmartWizard configuration assistant. It says, "No Internet Connection Detected. Please check the connections to the Internet WAN port and cable/DSL modem" - so I looked at your instructions but see no mention of connecting the router to the modem.
    Trying to follow your numbered steps...
    1. In SysPrefs: Network, Location showed Automatic, Configure showed Using DHCP.
    2. I don't see an option in Network to "DHCP Server-DISABLED", but I can choose Configure: OFF. I clicked Apply but browser still gives same message.
    I don't know how to continue the steps.

  • Time Capsule in a Dual Band Network using Airport Extreme (N) and (2) AE

    I need help and step by step directions to configure my TC in a Dual Band Network. Currently, I have my TC set up in a Create Network mode using 5Mhz and my AE (n) set up to establish a WDS and my AE (2) set up as WDS.
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    I use one of my AEs to connect a vista pc to my network by ethernet (it works) and the other AE in my family room to connect to my Toshiba HD DVD by ethernet (it works).
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    double click the blinking one in the utility and see if it tells you why its amber...WDS error?

  • Using Airport Express to Extend a Time Capsule Network: Results (*Long*)

    Thought I would share my recent (2 hours ago) experience with setting up an Airport Express to Extend a Time Capsule 802.11N 5Ghz Network. Basically I just followed the directions in the Apple Airport Utility, using the "Extend a Wireless Network" setting:
    Time Capsule (TC) 802.11N 5Ghz: In computer room
    Linksys (LNK) 802.11g configured as dual network router with TC, also in computer room.
    Airport Express (AE): In living room, about 50' away, several old plaster walls in between.
    According to iStumblr:
    1) I get an 80% signal from my TC when my MacBook is practically sitting on top of it.
    2) I get an 88% signal from my Linksys 802.11g sitting next to the TC
    3) I get 35% signal from my TC when my MacBook is in the living room. This is NOT enough signal, for some reason, to maintain a decent internet connection.
    4) I get a 46% signal from my LNK from the same location. This IS enough signal to connect to the network.
    5) With the AE configured as "Extend a Wireless Network" to the TC, and placed in the living room (again, about 50' from the TC base station), I get a 55% signal from the AE (which shows up as the same name as the TC network, for obvious reasons) Again, enough signal to connect to the network.
    I did some internet speed tests using SpeedTest (take these with a grain of salt, of course)
    1) From computer room over TC: 18Mb/s~22Mb/s average over 2 days of testing
    2) From computer room over LNK: 18Mb/s~22mb/s average over 2 days of testing
    3) From living room over AE(extended network from TC): 5~7Mb/s average in the last 2 hours
    4) From living room over LNK: 12~14Mb/s average over 2 days of testing
    Preliminary conclusions:
    1) Setting up an extended network is pretty straightforward, and works without issue.
    2) My 802.11g network with my old Linksys is far superior than my new extended 802.11N 5Ghz network, at least for internet connection speed.
    3) I feel a bit irritated buying this AE now to extend my 802.11N network, if its not going to give me any advantages over my ancient 802.11g network
    4) File transfers may still be better over the 802.11N-I will test that out at some point.
    5) I have not tried WDS instead of "Extend a Wireless Network"-not sure what the benefits would be.
    Computer Notes:
    MacBook Aluminum-MB(Al) 2.0 C2D (802.11n)
    finds 8 wireless networks in my neighborhood (3 of them are mine)
    MacBook White-MB(Wh) 1.83 CD (802.11g only)
    finds 10 wireless networks in my neighborhood (3 of them are mine)
    Oddly, the signal strength of my networks isn't that different between the two computers-between 2% and 5%, even though it can't see as many networks. The 2 networks the MB(Wh) CAN see are at around 21% and 25% signal-not sure why the MB(Al) can't see them at all.

    Your biggest mistake is confusing signal strength with signal quality. The signal indicator indicates strength and nothing else. You need to be using iStumblr to look at SNR (Signal to noise ratio).

  • Setting up/extending a Dual Band network

    Any recommendations regarding dual-band vs. the n/b/g blended network? Is it possible to set up a dual-band network on an AEBS-n and also boost the "n" side of the network with an AX-n? I've searched the discussions but have not found much on the topic, other than some comments regarding iMacs not liking "n" or 10.5.3 or airport utility 5.3.1 or maybe the "automatic" channel setting or possibly something else.....
    A little history:
    We have 3 iMacs (new 3.06 Ghz, 17" late 2006, 20" late 2006), 3 MacBook Pros, and one dual-2.5 Ghz G5 that all shared internet access through a Motorola modem/Comcast cable via an Airport Extreme Base Station b/g. The AEBS was in the basement and configured as a WDS with an Airport Express b/g that served to extend the network's reach to the second floor and remodeled kitchen (new steel beams). This setup has worked nearly flawlessly for years until recently, when both of the older iMacs started experiencing intermittent airport signal drops--supremely annoying. The modem seemed to work fine, however, and the AEBS light stayed green and the G5 and MBPs weren't having issues (some running Tiger, some Leopard).
    I thought that upgrading to Leopard (erase and install) might take are of any weird settings or corrupt files and thus improve the iMacs' airport connections, so I upgraded the first one, and it seemed to fix the problem--no drops of airport or internet for several hours. I then decided it was time to upgrade the network as well--swapping out the old b/g AEBS and AX for a new AEBS-n and AX-n. (Yes, I know, not too smart to change both the OS and the network at the same time ... but here we are.) Since the G5 in the basement can't connect to an "n" network, I decided to set up a Dual Band network with the AX-n acting as the old AX b/g had to extend the network.
    This is what it looked like:
    cable modem ------>
    AEBS-n ------> wireless to Airport Extreme-n ---> wireless to older iMacs and MBPs
    AX b/g (connected via ethernet to AEBS) -----> wireless to the G5
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    My questions are:
    1-Any ideas about why the airport is acting wonky? Are 'n' networks proving to be more problematic than the old ones?
    2-Is it possible to use an AX-n to extend the range of the "n" side of a dual band network?
    2-If so, any ideas for improving the network's reliability?
    3-If not, will going back to a b/g-compatible network negate the supposed speed benefits of 802.11n? Would I go back to using a WDS setup then?
    I've tried so many different settings, combinations, configurations trying to get this up and working, that I'm ready to pull my hair out. Any help will be greatly appreciated!
    Message was edited by: wiswic

    Thanks for your reply. Looking back at my sorry attempt at a diagram, I realize I wasn't clear about a couple of things. The modem is connected via ethernet to the AEBS-n. The AEBS-n is connected via ethernet to the AE-b/g, which provides wireless coverage to the G5 and others. So far, everything is in the basement.
    We live in an old house--no way to set up the network via ethernet--and so rely on the airport network to provide internet access to the computers on the first and second floors. In our old network, I had an AE-b/g as a WDS remote located in the kitchen that provided the first and second floors with their internet connection.
    When I upgraded our network, I set up the new AEBS-n as a 5.0 Ghz an-only network (create a network/allow network to be extended) and connected the old AE b/g to it (bridge mode/create a network) to provide wireless internet for the G5. The iMac in the kitchen could hardly pick up the "n" signal at all, and it could receive only a weak signal from the b/g network. Lots of dropped airport signals and also lots of dropped internet connections. Strangely enough, the MacBookPros on the second floor could pick up both signals pretty strongly, but they, too, had lots of drops. The 2nd floor iMac was even worse than the kitchen iMac--spotty reception at best, and lots of drops. The G5 and the iMac in the basement, meanwhile, were fine--strong signal and only intermittent drops.
    Hoping to extend the reach of the "n" network and thereby eliminate the drops, I added an AE-n to it (bridge mode/extend the network) and put it where the old b/g had been. This boosted the "n" signal to the kitchen and 2nd floor, but the drops seemed to become more frequent and for longer durations. Perhaps this was merely coincidence, but it made me question whether adding the AE-n in a dual-band network was advisable. Not finding any info that specifically addressed that scenario, I turned to the discussion forum for guidance.
    Further research leads me to believe that the iMacs' issues may be more due to their being iMacs in the first place, but I was still left with a very unreliable dual band network for the rest of the Macs. Reconfiguring the AEBS-n and AE-n as an n (b/g compatible) network has led to far fewer drops, but like you, I'd prefer to keep my  "an" devices separated from the G5 to make use of their higher wireless speed.
    So....I guess what I need to know is whether anyone else been having so many dual band dropouts? Have you had any success in eliminating them? Have you successfully extended the "n" side of their dual band without adversely affecting stability?
    As long as I know this isn't a lost cause, I'll give it another go and keep tweaking settings in hopes of finding a stable setup....

  • Time Machine:  External Hard Drive connected to a dual-band network

    I currently have a dual-band network setup using a 1TB Time Capsule (wireless-n only) and an AEBS (wireless b/g) in bridge mode.
    My unibody MBP and ATV utilize the Time Capsule, while an older Macbook and MacMini utilize the AEBS. I have Time Machine configured on the MBP to use the Time Capsule for backup.
    I have connected an external 500GB hard drive to the AEBS for the purpose of using Time Machine for the Macbook and MacMini. The Airport Utility shows the external drive connected to the AEBS, but when I try to configure Time Machine for the Macbook and MacMini I am only allowed to select the Time Capsule as the destination. Sorry for the long post. Any help would be greatly appreciated

    Assuming you have the square Extreme (not the UFO-style), you can use an external USB HDD with it.
    Time Machine backups to AirDisks (e.g. USB HDD attached to Extreme) is unsupported, but has been successful by some. As well, once you decide to move any old TM backups (HDD connected directly to the Mac) to an AirDisk, you cannot continue backing up to your previous TM backup. The format it saves to vs. a local HDD is different. The folder structure you see becomes a sparsebundle/disk image via the AirDisk.
    If you are interested in proceeding with your plan, check these links out:
    http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?messageID=8225748&#8225748
    http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?messageID=8650723&#8650723
    http://jamesshore.com/Blog/How-to-Accelerate-Time-Machine.html

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