Re: Linksys WET54GS5 and WAP54G



Edgar wrote:
I recently installed a NBX V3000 Business Telephone system.  The V3000,
which serves as the call processor, is located in the main building
along with fifteen 3Com NBX telephone sets, a number of computers,
network printers, the file server, router, and switch.  In a remote
building, there are two computers, a network printer, and three 3Com
NBX telephone sets.  The two buildings are connected via a pair of
LinkSys wireless devices - a WAP54G (main building) and the WET54GS5
(remote building) - set for wireless bridge mode.

The computers and the printer in the remote building can communicate
with the LAN server and the Internet across the wireless connection to
the main building.  You can ping the PCs and printer from either side
of the wireless link.  Unfortunately, the 3Com telephone sets in the
remote building cannot connect with the V3000 call processor at the
main building.  They cannot connect at the MAC level (as in true layer
2 LAN bridging) or the IP level.  When we manually assign static IP
addresses to the phone sets, we cannot ping them at all.  However, if
you take the same phones and attach them directly to the LAN, they work
fine.

I temporarily installed a 3Com Outdoor Wireless LAN bridge between the
two buildings.  As soon as the connection was established, the phones
worked fine.

I have been on LinkSys' technical chat support link four times now but
I'm just spinning my wheels with them.  One of the documents on the
WAP54G does not list the WET54GS5 as a linkable device.  I don't know
if the documentation says that because the WET54GS5 was not released at
the time of printing or if that is an actual proscription.  Also, the
LinkSys documentation does not go deep enough for adequate
troubleshooting.


Router, file server, NBX V3000, PCs, Phone sets, switch ------- WAP54G <<<<<>>>>>>> WET54GS5-----switch, 2 PCs, network printer, 3 NBX telephone sets.

Any suggestions?

Is there any difference in the way you power your phones when using the 3com bridge and the Linksys?
You don't say which model the 3com is but I presume it uses DC injection for it's power since it is an "outdoor Bridge".


Bob
.