How to use Airport Express to extend range in conjunction with Belkin N Wireless Router

I would like to know how I can extend the range of my Belkin N1 Wireless Router using the the Apple Airport Express? I saw a similar post to this question but the results talk about using this in conjunction with time capsule - I only have a Belkin router and the Airport Express.
If so, can someone help me to find out which settings/configuration I need to set of my Router and Airport Express in order the extend the range of my network.
Thank you in advance for your support.

Thank you for your quick reply. Can you please expand upon how to set up the 'bridge' mode?
I tried connecting the AE via Ethernet from the Belkin router but was not successful in being able to get any additional coverage. I feel like I am missing a vital set of instructions with set-up/configuration details.
Thanks again.

Similar Messages

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    I have poor Wifi signal upstairs in my house. Can Airport Express to extend that in conjunction with my current Hub (it's a Livebox - i currently live in France) ? Or do i need to run the Airport Express in conjunction with an Apple Hub ?

    Bonjour!
    You can extend the Livebox, just not wirlessly as Apple's implementation of WDS only works with other Apple devices.
    So you can either use an ethernet cable or as I do with my netgear router turn off the Livebox's WiFi (If that's possible) and use Airports to set up a separate wireless infrastructure.  Get 2 APs and plug one directly via etherenet into the Livebox then use WDS to extend this to a second AP wirelessly.
    Regards,
    Shawn

  • Airport Express to Extend Range of Airport Extreme 802.11 ac???

    Hi:
    We just installed a new Airport Extreme 802.11 ac. I would like to extend range within the house with our older Airport Express. I plug in the Airport Express (model A1264) 1 m away from the Extreme, but the light just blinks yellow on the Express. When one turns to Airport Utility, the box in the top left (Other Wi-Fi Devices) shows no other discovered options. Is this 802.11 n Express not compatible with my new 802.11 ac extreme, or am I doing something stupid/wrong?
    Thanks!

    Tried soft and hard reboots on the Express.  I now have a slowly flashing yellow light.
    But, Airport Utility under the tab "Other Wi-Fi Devices" still lists nothing.
    Airport Utility in the main window has a globe with a green dot next to the word "Internet" under it.
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    My iMac is connected to the internet via an ethernet cable (Wi-Fi is off).
    This is the same configuration I had with my old Base Station, but for some reason the Airport Express doesn't show up in Airport Utility with my new Airport Extreme as the base station and I have no idea how to use Airport Express as a range extender.
    Again, thank you for your advice and help.

  • I have an airport extreme attached to cable, then one airport express to extend the range. when i try to add an additional airport express to extend range in another area of house, can't get it to work. unility says it has found a new base station

    i have an airport extreme attached to cable, then one airport express to extend the range. when i try to add an additional airport express to extend range in another area of house, can't get it to work. utility says it has found a new base station and asks if i want to use it. if i click yes, then the old setup is disabled.

    Ok, thanks for clarifying which models you have. Please see the following Apple Support article on how to configure these older base stations for a Wireless Distribution System (WDS).

  • AIRPORT EXPRESS TO EXTEND RANGE OF BT HOMEHUB ( UK )

    Hello , Can anyone help me out please ?
    I have just switched to BT HOME HUB and would like to use airport express to extend the range . Spent ages with tech support and me trying out different options but had no luck . Does any one know if this is possible and if so please let me know how ?
    Thanks
    Chris

    Is your modem a BT Voyager 2100? If not, then the answer is no.
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  • Airport Express with Belkin N1 Wireless Router

    I saw Airport Express and am very interested to buy this. However, before I proceed to buy, it would want to see if it can work with my Belkin N1 Wireless Router and how.
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    If this can work, I'm going to get one immediately!! =D

    Welcome to the discussions, Richard!
    Preferred setup is
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    The <-> is normally a display for an ethernet connection. The AirPort Express only has one ethernet port, and it will be used to connect to the DSL modem in your example.
    So, it would not be possible to connect the Belkin device the AirPort Express using <-> ethernet.

  • How do I use airport express to extend my wireless network?

    How vcan I extend the range of my wireless network using Airport Express?

    It appears that you may have "join a wireless network" and "extend a wireless network" mixed up a bit.
    The Express can "join" virtually any wireless network produced by any manufacturer's router if it is provided with the correct settings:
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    the correct wireless security settings
    and correct password.
    "Join" is normally used for AirTunes or to connect a USB printer to the Express for remote printing.
    But, the Express does not provide any additional wirless coverage when it "joins" another wireless network.
    Apple's "Extend a wireless network" feature, which was introduced about 5 years ago, allows the Express to connect to another Apple "n" wireless router and then "repeat" or "extend" the wireless signal....providing more wireless coverage in the area where the Express is located.
    This is a proprietary setting. Apple says it will not work with devices from other manufacturers. To our knowledge, this is correct.
    Prior to 2007, Apple used a setting called WDS to allow the Express to be configured to provide more wireless coverage. Attempts were made by a number of manufacturers to standardize the WDS settings, but things were never finalized.
    The result is that Apple's older "b/g" routers were sometimes compatible with WDS settings from another manufacturer. There were a handful of products....5 or 6, as I recall....that were said to work. Some did, some didn't. Linksys had a couple of models, Netgear had one, SMC another, etc.  Extremely limited.
    Since WDS was never adopted as an industry standard, manufacturers developed their own WDS settings. Compatibility was extemely limited and unreliable. That continues to this day with WDS.
    Bottom line....It is always best to stick with the same manufacturer throughout your network as far as routing is concerned.
    If you have an newer "n" Apple router like an AirPort Extreme, the Express can extend the wireless as can along Extreme. If your Extreme is dual band, and you want to extend both bands, then you need another Extreme.
    Another responder suggested to someone that they could connect the AirPort Express to a router via Ethernet.  What exactly would that achieve?
    That is a completely different subject since this discussion is about extending a wireless network using wireless only.

  • HT204371 How to setup Airport Express to extend my network range?

    I have an Airport Extreme as main router and want to install an Airport Express to extend the range of my wifi. However it only works when connected through an ethernet cable. How can I setup my Airport Express to work wirelessly and extend the wifi range?

    I have a Time Capsule in the basement and my daughter is 3 stories up on her iMac and she complains about speed while online. She is about 40 feet up from me with 3 ceilings in between.
    It is a nothing short of a miracle that she can get any signal at all under those conditions.
    Found an AirPort Express Base Station (the one that looks like a power bar for Apple laptops) - model # is A1084.
    Unfortunately, this older version of the Express does not have the capability to "extend a wireless network" using wireless only.
    You need the A1264 version, or the "new" AirPort Express (that looks like a miniature Time Capsule) if you want to try to "extend" using wireless only. In this case, you would want to locate the extending device approximately half the distance between the Time Capsule and her computer.
    I can't say that this will do a lot to improve things....it's going to be one of those situations where you won't know if it will work until you try.
    (or am I better off trying to run a super long Ethernet cable to her somehow?)
    This is by far the best choice in terms of performance. There is no signal loss in a wire. She will be amazed at how well and fast her Mac runs this way.

  • How do I use Airport Express to extend my current network.

    I am now using an Airport Extreme and want to use my old Airport Express to extend my network. How do I do this? Thanks!

    Linc44, welcome to the discussions!
    I am now using an Airport Extreme and want to use my old Airport Express to extend my network. How do I do this?
    By "old AirPort Express", I take it that you have a "b/g" version of the device, which is model number A 1084. Is that correct?

  • Help: Using Airport Express to extend the range of Airport Extreme

    I am trying to use the Airport Express to extend the range of the network created by my Airport Extreme. The Express works in terms of streaming music from iTunes on the PC connected to th Extreme.
    However, I am trying to run a short Cat-5 cable out of the Express to a nearby PC in order to have access to the internet. If the Express is recognized by the Extreme and can play music through connected stereo cables, why can I get an internet connection through the LAN port..??
    Here's a real basic representation of my connections...
    Cable Modem >>-- Cat5 -->> Airport Extreme >>-- Wireless -->> Airport Express >>-- Cat5 -->>PC#2

    To wirelessly extend the range between two AirPorts, you need to configure them in a Wireless Distribution System (WDS).
    To facilitate the WDS set up, try the following:
    o Perform a "hard" reset on the AirPort Extreme Base Stations & a "factory default" reset on the AirPort Express Base Stations (AX) before setting up the WDS.
    o Place the base stations within near proximity of each other during the set up phase, and then relocate them to their desired locations when complete.
    o To avoid having to "switch" wireless networks during the WDS setup, attach each of the remote/relay base station, via an Ethernet cable, to the main base station. Of course, this would be dependent on the AirPort types used for the main/relays/remotes.
    o Be sure to jot down the MAC addresses for each of the base stations to be used in the WDS as these will be required during the setup.
    o When enabling wireless encryption, configure the relay/remote base stations first and the main base station last.

  • How does one use airport express to extend a non-Apple wifi network?

    Hello. The wifi signal reaching my room shows good on my macbook but weak on my ipod touch. Therefore I want to pick it up on my airport express and extend/boost it.
    I have tried everything in the auto and manual methods of setup to do this, but the only thing I can manage to do is to join a wireless network wirelessly and then then connect to it through a ethernet cable from my airport express. I want to pick it up wirelessly and extend it wirelessly - is this possible? This is the reason why I bought it!
    thanks a lot, JJ

    Thanks for that info. So, I have been trying to use my airport express n to extend an airport n network (for greater distance of coverage) and cannot get this to work either. I can join the other apple airport's network and then connect to the airport express by cable. I have tried all the help available here but that seems to be the only way to extend a network. But I cannot see any point in that! JJ

  • Using Airport Express to extend an existing wired/wireless Dlink network

    Our network uses a Dlink router which must be located in the basement. Our home office Apple computers are wired, and the wireless Apple laptop is almost always used in the living room, directly above the Dlink, so no signal strength problems there. However, the wireless signal does not reach as far as the home office. It's only 20-25 feet away on the main floor, but for some reason, probably structural, the wireless signal doesn't penetrate.
    Now I need to extend wireless access capability to the home office, so that I can use the iPod Touch in the office. I've read through a number of posts, and haven't found one that exactly matches this issue.
    The information about joining an existing network has this sentence in it:
    "Or you can use AirPort Express or AirPort Extreme to extend the range of an existing AirPort Extreme or AirPort Express network by creating a Wireless Distribution System (WDS)."
    The existing network I have isn't an AX network. And it's both wired and wireless. And one of the detailed posts explained why a WDS was not the best way to go. Plus I'm confused by references to "base stations" which seem to refer to something that looks like a Time Capsule, not to an AX.
    If AX will do what I want it to, I'm envisioning plugging it (all by its lonesome) in to a wall outlet in the hallway outside the home office. That's based both on what I want and what the salesperson said AX could do when I explained what was wanted.
    The Dlink network has been working beautifully for months, and I don't want to do anything to screw it up! That includes even opening up the AX utility software until I know exactly what to do.
    Can I do the setup (once it's explained!) on the wired computer? If I have to connect the AX to the network as part of the setup, can I use the 5-port switch that extends the wired connection the extra two feet to the computer (and also provides the wired network connection for the main printer)? Or should I take the laptop downstairs and connect the AX directly to the Dlink router?
    Thanks,
    Marg

    +If I connected the AX by cable to my 5-port switch (which in turn is connected directly to the Dlink), would that constitute "an ethernet connection to the D-Link"? If so, then it should be possible to use it as described in your 6th paragraph, to "expand ... (our) main wireless network" -- is that right?+
    Yes, this will work great.
    +I'd never heard of ethernet powerline adapters, which sound very cool but are not wireless per se - you need a cable to connect the computer with at the far end, and it's wireless capability that I'm trying to create in the home office.+
    Rather than hooking a computer up at one end, you could hook up the AirPort Express at one one and setup wireless that way. You won't need the adapters in this case since you have access to the switch. You may have need sometime in the future to get an ethernet signal to another part of the house, so keep this option in mind.
    Here is how to setup the AirPort Express. You will use AirPort Utility, which should already be on your Mac Pro. Its located Hard Drive > Applications > Utilities.
    Temporarily, connect the AirPort Express (AX) directly to your computer with a short ethernet cable to set it up. When you have the configuration done, you can disconnect the cable and move the AX to the location where it's needed.
    Open AirPort Utility and click Manual Setup
    Click the Base Station tab below the row of icons to enter a name and device password for the device and choose your time zone, etc.
    Then click the AirPort icon in the row of icons at the top of the setup page.
    Click the Wireless tab below the icons
    Wireless Mode....Create a wireless netork
    Wireless Network Name....Exact same name as your D-Link wireless network name
    Radio Mode....802.11n (802.11b/g compatible)
    Channel...Automatic (see note* at bottom)
    Wireless Security...exact same setting as D-Link network
    Wireless Password....exact same setting as D-Link network
    Click the Internet icon in the row of icons
    At the bottom of the page, make sure that the setting for Connection Sharing is set to "Off (Bridge Mode)". This setting allows the AX to work in tandem with the D-Link.
    Update to save settings.
    *Automatic will usually work well for this. Ideally, you want the D-Link and AX to be on channels that are least 5 channels apart. Automatic will usually choose an open channel, but you may need to manually set the channels on both routers for this step.
    Your setup should work fine. Please post back on your progress or questions.

  • Using airport express to extend network/stream music

    Hi,
    I just bought an airport express to extend my network throughout my house and stream music to my stereo system in my living room. My time capsule, which is connected to the DSL modem and is the base station, is in one far end of the house, while the airport express is at the other end. It has greatly improved the range of my network and when using my macbook in the front room, it gets full bars, however, the when using airtunes to stream music with iTunes 9 and OS 10.6, the music will cut in and out randomly and I occasionally get unknown error -15000 when trying to connect.
    I played around with the airport express channels (any channel other than 10 will receive an unknown error -15000 automatically,) adjusted the firewall, and adjusted Netbarrier X, my third party security software. I found information in this article:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/TA21538?viewlocale=en_US
    The only thing that works is moving the airport express close to my computer to remove the physical barriers. It plays perfectly then. Is it possible to buy a second airport express and plug it in halfway between my stereo and time capsule to boost the signal to the airport express plugged into my stereo? Will this solve the problem of the music stream cutting in and out every 10-20 seconds?

    Mad Cow wrote:
    I checked and my signal is -87 and noise is -95.
    At the risk of being the bearer of bad news, that's a rather poor signal value. Here is a description of what different ranges of signal-to-noise mean:
    http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?messageID=10329543&start=1
    In the other post, you mentioned interference from other electronics. Could physical barriers be causing interference also?
    Barriers won't cause interference, but they can reduce signal transmission. How far apart are the two units, how many walls are in between, and of what material are those walls made?
    If this is the case, can I add a second airport express between my base station and stereo-attached airport express to boost the signal?
    In theory something like that might work, but I'm not sure that an AirPort Express can act as a "relay" station between a "main" station and a "remote" station. It might require an AirPort Extreme. Perhaps someone else can comment on that possibility.
    Can you relocate your Time Capsule to an different phone outlet? Can you use longer cables between the wall and the modem and/or between the modem and the Time Capsule to move the Time Capsule to the other side of the room to be nearer to your AirPort Express? Can you use a longer audio cable between your AirPort Express and your sound system?
    You may be able to use a pair of Power-Line units
    (http://computer.howstuffworks.com/power-network.htm) to connect your AirPort Express to your Time Capsule via Ethernet.

  • Use airport express to extend network from linksys wrt54g

    Hello all, I'm having no luck here, and hope you can help me. I am running a MacBook Pro, 2.16 GHz, Intel Core 2 Duo, 3 Gigs ram, OS X 10.6.8.I am at work, trying to use a newly purchased AirPort Express to extend the signal from the back office, which has a Linksys WRT54G router. I updated the router's firmware to 1.02.8, build 001, dated 8.5.09. I have tried numerous times to configure the AE using AirPort Utility, and always wind up with an error message, "An error occurred while updating the configuration. Make sure your Apple Wi-Fi base station is plugged in and in range of your computer or connected via Ethernet and try again. (-6753)" During the configuration process, I am asked what I want to do with AE, I have tried both "create a new wireless network," and "I want AE to join my current network," with no success. Any comments will be appreciated.

    The Linksys WRT54G and WRT54GS (through version 4 only for both models) were said to be compatible with Apple's WDS settings.
    Perhaps this article may offer some clues, but it is doubtful that you will be able to make this work with the particular version of Linksys router that you have.
    http://hints.macworld.com/article.php?story=2006060516541633

  • Original Airport Express to extend range of non-Apple WiFi network

    I own one of the original Aiport Express devices in addition to an Actiontec PK5000 modem/router.  I would like to use the Airport Express to extend the range of the non-Apple router/wifi network.
    I heard it is possible to do this using a direct connection with an ethernet cable.  Is this possible?
    Thanks

    With the AirPort Express (AX) powered up, hold in the reset button for 8-10 seconds and then release. Allow a minute for the AX to restart.
    Connect the AX to the Actiontec gateway with the Ethernet cable, which I assume is working correctly.
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