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10-25-2023 04:10 PM
Hello I have a Bell Home Hub 3000 modem, the DHCP IP Range available displays 192.168.2. N till 192.168.2.N+254 whereas my device is connected 192.168.5. y etc, can someone explain why there is a variance. I am very much concerned about this.
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10-27-2023 04:08 PM
Could you please verify all of your settings & in particular your device IP: 192.168.5.y ? Is your modem DHCP set to On or Off?
Every device connected to network is assigned an IP address. IP addresses are expressed as a set of four numbers, E.g. For example address it might be 192.168.2.1 Each number in the set can range from 0 to 255. So, the full IP addressing range goes from 0.0.0.0 to 255.255.255.255.
Your router login address IP is::192.168.2.1
Your Subnet mask should be set at 255.255..255.0
A subnet mask is used to divide an IP address into two parts. One part identifies the host (computer), the other part identifies the network to which it belongs. To better understand how IP addresses and subnet masks work, look at an IP address and see how it's organized.
Bell modems are setup for DHCP. The assignment of IP addresses happens dynamically within a given address range as shown below. A device connected to the network (modem) doesn't have a forever address. The IP address can periodically change as its lease time expires unless the lease is successfully renew.
IP address range by default in your Bell modem is: 192.168.2.10 to 192.168.2.254
Depending on your lease renewal settings, the IP address of your device can & will probably change unless it is assigned an IP address or given a static IP
I would not touch these settings unless you completely understand the changes you are making & the implications / outcome of the changes.
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10-27-2023 05:25 PM - edited 10-27-2023 05:35 PM
@WelshTerrier ,there's no indication that @MRSNM doesn't understand how subnets and DHCP works.
The OP says the settings have not been touched.
The issue is that the IP address range of connected devices conflicts with the default address range of the Homehub 3000.
@MRSNM , unfortunately I cannot see your screenshots. But I suggest you disable the VPN that appears to be running. Then reboot the modem, and see if the DHCP server is providing addresses in the range 192.168.2.x
Let us know the results.
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10-28-2023 08:59 AM
Hi @MRSNM
The only visible screenshot you posted showed a VPN configuration so I thought you were running one.
When you power up the HomeHub, you're seeing Bell 012, the default SSID for the wifi broadcast, and the MAC address of the modem, (MAC = Media Access Control; 12 digit hexadecimal). It really has no bearing on the issue you posted about.
For DHCP, here's what I see on my HomeHub 4000. These are the default settings. Note the Router IP Address.
What is your router's IP address? You don't need to provide a screenshot, just post what it says.
We'll go from there.
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10-27-2023 01:50 PM
Hi there @MRSNM,
Welcome to the Bell Community, and thank you for reaching out to us.
Can you share a screenshot of what you see? Also, what device is being dedicated to that IP address?
- Patricia
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10-27-2023 04:08 PM
Could you please verify all of your settings & in particular your device IP: 192.168.5.y ? Is your modem DHCP set to On or Off?
Every device connected to network is assigned an IP address. IP addresses are expressed as a set of four numbers, E.g. For example address it might be 192.168.2.1 Each number in the set can range from 0 to 255. So, the full IP addressing range goes from 0.0.0.0 to 255.255.255.255.
Your router login address IP is::192.168.2.1
Your Subnet mask should be set at 255.255..255.0
A subnet mask is used to divide an IP address into two parts. One part identifies the host (computer), the other part identifies the network to which it belongs. To better understand how IP addresses and subnet masks work, look at an IP address and see how it's organized.
Bell modems are setup for DHCP. The assignment of IP addresses happens dynamically within a given address range as shown below. A device connected to the network (modem) doesn't have a forever address. The IP address can periodically change as its lease time expires unless the lease is successfully renew.
IP address range by default in your Bell modem is: 192.168.2.10 to 192.168.2.254
Depending on your lease renewal settings, the IP address of your device can & will probably change unless it is assigned an IP address or given a static IP
I would not touch these settings unless you completely understand the changes you are making & the implications / outcome of the changes.
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10-27-2023 04:37 PM - last edited on 10-30-2023 08:43 AM by BellPatricia
Hi Patrica,
thank you for taking the time to repol, here is the screenshot.
also noticed this in my ethernet settings.
As well all devices in my house were connected to the IP address in this range (see screenshot)
192.168.5.** (my car-tesla)
192.168.5.** - my ring doorbell
my Lorex home security was connected via ethernet port and yet showed up on the primary wifi network-same as tesla 192.168.5.**
Alexa - ip address shows 192.168.5.**
My samsung phone- same as alexa
my iphone - ip address shows 192.168.5.**
my children phone - 192.168.5.**
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10-27-2023 04:43 PM
As well, i did not touch any settings- i noticed the DHCP range variance on the advanced settings whereas my devices are connected to a different ip.
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10-27-2023 04:46 PM
My device is a HomeHub 3000 - Sagemcom FAST5566 serial number dm ends in 0795
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10-27-2023 05:04 PM
I assume you are making reference to your modem settings when you log in to 192.168.2.1. Unfortunately, I can not see your pictures / screenshots as they are masked.
Your advanced network settings will show your DHCP settings unless previously altered. If you view your devices these are either the DHCP addresses that are assigned, reserved, etc. for each device connected to your network. E.g. TV, Primary WI-FI, Ethernet, etc.
If everything is working ok., best to leave as is.
Take care. Enjoy.
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10-27-2023 05:25 PM - edited 10-27-2023 05:35 PM
@WelshTerrier ,there's no indication that @MRSNM doesn't understand how subnets and DHCP works.
The OP says the settings have not been touched.
The issue is that the IP address range of connected devices conflicts with the default address range of the Homehub 3000.
@MRSNM , unfortunately I cannot see your screenshots. But I suggest you disable the VPN that appears to be running. Then reboot the modem, and see if the DHCP server is providing addresses in the range 192.168.2.x
Let us know the results.
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10-27-2023 08:29 PM - last edited on 10-30-2023 08:42 AM by BellPatricia
Hi @ZaneP @BellPatricia @WelshTerrier
I don't have any VPN (dont know how to set it up too) and have not masked any images- (sorry dont know how it is getting masked) The Bell Home Hub 3000 modem is plugged in to the pwer and as soon it loads it said connected to Bell 012 and this address DA:F2:13:6D:02:**
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10-27-2023 08:30 PM
OF NOTE: the IP Address is greyed out - even the last numbers
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10-28-2023 08:59 AM
Hi @MRSNM
The only visible screenshot you posted showed a VPN configuration so I thought you were running one.
When you power up the HomeHub, you're seeing Bell 012, the default SSID for the wifi broadcast, and the MAC address of the modem, (MAC = Media Access Control; 12 digit hexadecimal). It really has no bearing on the issue you posted about.
For DHCP, here's what I see on my HomeHub 4000. These are the default settings. Note the Router IP Address.
What is your router's IP address? You don't need to provide a screenshot, just post what it says.
We'll go from there.
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10-29-2023 03:29 PM
He's using polarbear VPN, which is part of MacAfee. That is why his Windows networking shows polarbear tunnel, and that is why his IP address is not matching the range of the HH3000 DHCP server IP's.
It's part of McAfee safe connect, which is part of McAfee in general.
You have to disable VPN to get an IP from the HH3000 DHCP server, and you will see it will be in the "proper" address range.
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10-29-2023 04:38 PM - edited 10-29-2023 04:40 PM
Good catch. I asked about the VPN and said to disable it, but the OP said there wasn't one running. Obviously there was and I should have pressed further on this.
They haven't replied to my post, so @MRSNM please turn off McAfee on that computer and reboot your modem.
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10-29-2023 04:42 PM
Another thing to do when unsure about your configuration is open a web browser and go to https://whatismyipaddress.com/
It will show your public IP. If you are on a VPN, that will be showing the VPN server IP, not the Bell IP.
That is an easy test when doubting your configuration. Another one is doing a speed test, as it will show poor speeds due to VPN speed limitations.
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10-29-2023 09:41 PM - last edited on 10-30-2023 08:44 AM by BellPatricia
@Vanadiel @ZaneP @BellPatricia @WelshTerrier
I do not have McAffe and McAffee VPN turned on at all. I don't know how to set that up either.
@ZaneP But bell 012 is not the name of my modem? I am aware of the MAC Address- the address I posted does not belong to the modem I have - I checked.
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