Forum Discussion
Cudy AC1200 Cellular Modem/Router with WiFi
Hello. I purchased this Cudy AC1200 Router/Modem and got an Internet-only prepaid plan with TM. However, I can’t do services that can be had with a normal Internet connection from cable or DSL! The Modem/Router is capable of setting up DDNS, an L2TP VPN server, etc., but none of that is working! The DDNS complains because the outside IP address is a “Private” IP. The L2TP is NOT reachable. I had set the Modem/Router to respond to ping from WAN but when I ping the “Public” IP addresss that is shown on the Modem/Router status, it does not respond to ping!
Why is there two IP addresses shown on the Cellular status field? Example: the Public is 172.58.207.82 then there is an “IP Address” of 172.32.84.244. AND when I check my IP Address from a whatismyipaddress.com, it gives me 172.58.207.41!!! Why is that???
I was going to use this to replace a cable internet service to my townhouse that I’m going to put in the market. The cable internet is going to be moved to my son’s apartment so I need to have access to my network in the townhouse (cameras, garage door, thermostat) while it is on the market. With these issues, I can’t access my LAN from remote!
Cellular home internet is totally a different animal!
Is there a way to having a straight-forward Internet connection using TM? Thanks in advance.
- iTinkeralotBandwidth Buff
So it looks like you are good to go.
- firefox111Network Novice
So I am on CGNAT. Looking at the second paragraph on my original post:
Public: 172.58.207.82
IP Address: 172.32.84.244
whatismyipaddress.com: 172.168.207.41The Public and whatismyipaddress.com addresses are not the same.
As I have stated, I am able to gain access to the inside LAN via the Windows 10 desktop with Team Viewer. This setup will be implemented on Monday, October 24, at location. I’m currently 1,800 miles away in my Laboratory.
- iTinkeralotBandwidth Buff
172.58.207.82 then there is an “IP Address” of 172.32.84.244.
If you trace route out from a local client the first few router responses should help clarify the path and IP addressing.
IP Address from a whatismyipaddress.com, it gives me 172.58.207.41 < WAN IP.
I can see 172.58.207.41 is from a public class B, IPv4 address range
Private Class B network, 172.16.0.0 – 172.31.255.255 (172.16/12 prefix)
- iTinkeralotBandwidth Buff
So you can pretty easily determine if your solution is working through CGNAT. I am pretty sure the answer is yes but in your test solution you can determine this with the steps below.
- Open up a web browser.
- Type What is my IP in the URL bar.
- Hit enter.
- The browser will display your public IP address on top of the screen.
- Note down this IP address.
- Now log into your router’s settings by typing in the router IP in the URL.
- Use your username and password to log in.
- Navigate to the Status page.
- Here you can check the ISP-assigned WAN IP address.
- If both IP addresses are the same, then you are not on CGNAT.
- However, if this WAN IP differs from the public IP address, you are behind CGNAT.
Reference: https://www.purevpn.com/blog/what-is-cgnat/
- iTinkeralotBandwidth Buff
You stated,
“Why is there two IP addresses shown on the Cellular status field? Example: the Public is 172.58.207.82 then there is an “IP Address” of 172.32.84.244. AND when I check my IP Address from a whatismyipaddress.com, it gives me 172.58.207.41!!! Why is that???”
You might need to check with T-Mobile on their NAT solution with that service. My guess is that there is not a static IP address associated but there is a pool of addresses and the external router address on the outside NAT interface IP might change and not be fixed. That is a question to ask of T-Mobile and get an escalation engineer to clarify how that is going to work.
- iTinkeralotBandwidth Buff
Ah! You are using the Cudy AC1200 Router/Modem unlocked 4G LTE solution?
- iTinkeralotBandwidth Buff
CGNAT is carrier grade NAT which is the network construct T-Mobile uses to allow the private addressing to public addressing. There are some things that do not work so well with their solution. Some things work fine but others not so much. It does present some challenges and obstacles for some users. If you have tested across with the T-Mobile gateway solution then you should be good to go.
Sorry, it was not clear how deep your investigation has gone. Looks like you are doing your homework.
- firefox111Network Novice
I can traverse the CGNAT (whatever it is) from remote to my Windows 10 desktop running Team Viewer inside the AC1200 modem/router LAN. I have done this already in my Lab. I had to do this scenario in my Lab and it works!
- iTinkeralotBandwidth Buff
OK so an improved animal. That could be totally workable. I have never used it so I cannot say but it seems to be business oriented so probably will do what you want.
- firefox111Network Novice
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