sorcerer
Active Member
- Reaction score
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- Location
- Preston, Lancs, UK
Apologies straight away for a very long post 
A friend runs a hairdressing and beauty salon and has decided that she wants to offer clients free wifi whilst they are in there. She signed up for BT Business Broadband and the service (ADSL2+) is now active, using the supplied BT Business Hub 3 (a combined ADSL modem/wifi router).
She has just one computer in the salon, a laptop, that holds all the employee and payroll-type stuff. Naturally, she wants to access the internet on that laptop now that they have broadband in the salon and, of course, she wants to do that wirelessly rather than wired, so keeping the 'private' and 'public' wifi networks completely separate from each other is an absolute necessity.
I have absolutely no experience in this aspect of our work, but I seem to remember reading somewhere that some business-class routers have two or more SSIDs on the wireless side, thereby making it a trivial matter to keep private and public networks separated - sadly, the BT Business Hub does not. In fact, to call it a 'business' hub would seem to be a bit of a misnomer because it seems to offer nothing over and above the BT Home Hub 3.
So, I dug out a Cisco/Linksys E2000 router that I'd bought many moons ago and installed DD-WRT on to play with, when computers were just a hobby of mine, in the days before I had to attempt to make a living out of them. I never did get to grips with DD-WRT and its gazillion settings and parameters that can be altered and adjusted, which is why the E2000 was languishing forgotten, in a dark area of the loft until now.
I'm currently having a play with it here at home (I've got a BT Home Hub) before setting it up at the salon and I need your thoughts and comments on what I've done and what I've found. It seems to work, but does it work correctly, or is there a better way of doing it that I don't know about?
The BT Hub is obviously the gateway and the Linksys sits behind it. As such, my idea is to have the BT Hub service the laptop on the private wifi network and the Linksys will provide the public wifi network. To that end, I used an ethernet cable to connect one of the BT Hub's LAN ports to the WAN port of the Linksys and I put the Linksys on a different subnet (192.168.2.xxx, whereas the BT Hub is on 192.168.1.xxx).
I thought about giving the laptop a static IP address but decided against it in case they take it away from the salon to use elsewhere, so I currently have DHCP turned on, on both routers and it doesn't seem to cause any problems - but is it OK to do this?
I've switched on 'AP Isolation' on the Linksys so that wifi clients on the public network can't connect to each other. Using 'Fing' network scanner on my iPhone, when connected to the Linksys router it only sees devices with 192.168.2.xxx addresses - when connected to the BT Hub, it only sees 192.168.1.xxx addresses, so I think I've achieved the goal of keeping the private and public wifi networks separate. The private network will be protected by (1) a good strong password and (2) MAC address filtering, only allowing the MAC address of the laptop to connect to it.
One problem (not insurmountable but a bit inconvenient) is that the password of the public network will need to be changed weekly to avoid neighbours jumping on it. Unless anyone can suggest something different, the only way that comes to mind is that the laptop be taken to the Linksys router and connected by ethernet to do the password change, which seems a bit clunky?
I fully admit that I am an absolute noob when it comes to this sort of thing and I may be going about it all the wrong way, so feel free to point out the errors of my thinking and point me in the right direction if you don't mind.
Thanks very much and apologies again for such a long post.
John

A friend runs a hairdressing and beauty salon and has decided that she wants to offer clients free wifi whilst they are in there. She signed up for BT Business Broadband and the service (ADSL2+) is now active, using the supplied BT Business Hub 3 (a combined ADSL modem/wifi router).
She has just one computer in the salon, a laptop, that holds all the employee and payroll-type stuff. Naturally, she wants to access the internet on that laptop now that they have broadband in the salon and, of course, she wants to do that wirelessly rather than wired, so keeping the 'private' and 'public' wifi networks completely separate from each other is an absolute necessity.
I have absolutely no experience in this aspect of our work, but I seem to remember reading somewhere that some business-class routers have two or more SSIDs on the wireless side, thereby making it a trivial matter to keep private and public networks separated - sadly, the BT Business Hub does not. In fact, to call it a 'business' hub would seem to be a bit of a misnomer because it seems to offer nothing over and above the BT Home Hub 3.
So, I dug out a Cisco/Linksys E2000 router that I'd bought many moons ago and installed DD-WRT on to play with, when computers were just a hobby of mine, in the days before I had to attempt to make a living out of them. I never did get to grips with DD-WRT and its gazillion settings and parameters that can be altered and adjusted, which is why the E2000 was languishing forgotten, in a dark area of the loft until now.
I'm currently having a play with it here at home (I've got a BT Home Hub) before setting it up at the salon and I need your thoughts and comments on what I've done and what I've found. It seems to work, but does it work correctly, or is there a better way of doing it that I don't know about?
The BT Hub is obviously the gateway and the Linksys sits behind it. As such, my idea is to have the BT Hub service the laptop on the private wifi network and the Linksys will provide the public wifi network. To that end, I used an ethernet cable to connect one of the BT Hub's LAN ports to the WAN port of the Linksys and I put the Linksys on a different subnet (192.168.2.xxx, whereas the BT Hub is on 192.168.1.xxx).
I thought about giving the laptop a static IP address but decided against it in case they take it away from the salon to use elsewhere, so I currently have DHCP turned on, on both routers and it doesn't seem to cause any problems - but is it OK to do this?
I've switched on 'AP Isolation' on the Linksys so that wifi clients on the public network can't connect to each other. Using 'Fing' network scanner on my iPhone, when connected to the Linksys router it only sees devices with 192.168.2.xxx addresses - when connected to the BT Hub, it only sees 192.168.1.xxx addresses, so I think I've achieved the goal of keeping the private and public wifi networks separate. The private network will be protected by (1) a good strong password and (2) MAC address filtering, only allowing the MAC address of the laptop to connect to it.
One problem (not insurmountable but a bit inconvenient) is that the password of the public network will need to be changed weekly to avoid neighbours jumping on it. Unless anyone can suggest something different, the only way that comes to mind is that the laptop be taken to the Linksys router and connected by ethernet to do the password change, which seems a bit clunky?
I fully admit that I am an absolute noob when it comes to this sort of thing and I may be going about it all the wrong way, so feel free to point out the errors of my thinking and point me in the right direction if you don't mind.
Thanks very much and apologies again for such a long post.
John