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Federal Communication Commission Interference Statement This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one of the following measures:
- Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
- Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.
- Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected.
- Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help. FCC Caution: Any changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the user's authority to operate this equipment. This transmitter must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter. Radiation Exposure Statement:
This equipment complies with FCC radiation exposure limits set forth for an uncontrolled environment. This equipment should be installed and operated with minimum distance 20cm between the radiator & your body. Industry Canada statement:
This device complies with RSS-210 of the Industry Canada Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. Ce dispositif est conforme la norme CNR-210 d'Industrie Canada applicable aux appareils radio exempts de licence. Son fonctionnement est sujet aux deux conditions suivantes: (1) le dispositif ne doit pas produire de brouillage prjudiciable, et (2) ce dispositif doit accepter tout brouillage reu, y compris un brouillage susceptible de provoquer un fonctionnement indsirable. Radiation Exposure Statement:
This equipment complies with IC radiation exposure limits set forth for an uncontrolled environment. This equipment should be installed and operated with minimum distance 20cm between the radiator & your body. Dclaration d'exposition aux radiations:
Cet quipement est conforme aux limites d'exposition aux rayonnements IC tablies pour un environnement non contrl. Cet quipement doit tre install et utilis avec un minimum de 20 cm de distance entre la source de rayonnement et votre corps.
1 | User Manual | Users Manual | 3.99 MiB | July 16 2014 |
N300 Wireless Router Model WNR2000v5 User Manual May 2014 202-11381-01 350 East Plumeria Drive San Jose, CA 95134 USA DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Support Thank you for selecting NETGEAR products. After installing your device, locate the serial number on the label of your product and use it to register your product at https://my.netgear.com. You must register your product before you can use NETGEAR telephone support. NETGEAR recommends registering your product through the NETGEAR website. For product updates and web support, visit http://support.netgear.com. Phone (US & Canada only): 1-888-NETGEAR. Phone (Other Countries): Check the list of phone numbers at http://support.netgear.com/general/contact/default.aspx. Compliance For regulatory compliance information, visit http://www.netgear.com/about/regulatory. See the regulatory compliance document before connecting the power supply. Trademarks NETGEAR, the NETGEAR logo, and Connect with Innovation are trademarks and/or registered trademarks of NETGEAR, Inc. and/or its subsidiaries in the United States and/or other countries. Information is subject to change without notice. NETGEAR, Inc. All rights reserved. 2 DRAFT Contents Chapter 1 Hardware Setup Unpack Your Router . 7 Front Panel . 7 Rear Panel. 9 Position Your Router . 9 Cable Your Router . 10 Chapter 2 Connect to the Network and Access the Router Connect to the Network. 12 Wired Connection . 12 WiFi Connection . 12 Types of Logins . 13 Log In to the Router . 13 Chapter 3 Specify Initial Settings Use the Setup Wizard . 15 Manually Set Up the Internet Connection . 16 Specify an Internet Connection Without a Login. 16 Specify an Internet Connection That Uses a Login . 17 Specify IPv6 Internet Connections. 19 Requirements for Entering IPv6 Addresses . 20 IPv6 Auto Detect . 20 IPv6 Auto Config. 21 IPv6 6to4 Tunnel. 23 IPv6 Pass Through . 25 IPv6 Fixed . 25 IPv6 DHCP . 27 IPv6 PPPoE. 28 Change the MTU Size . 30 Chapter 4 Optimize Performance Prioritize Internet Traffic with Quality of Service . 33 Optimize Internet Gaming with Upstream QoS . 33 Optimize Internet Streaming with QoS . 35 Add QoS Rules by Service . 36 Add a QoS Rule by Device . 37 Edit a QoS Rule . 38 Delete a QoS Rule . 39 3 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Delete All QoS Rules . 40 Wi-Fi Multimedia Quality of Service . 40 Improve Network Connections with Universal Plug and Play. 41 Chapter 5 Control Access to the Internet Set Up Parental Controls . 44 Use Keywords to Block Internet Sites . 46 Block Services from the Internet . 48 Schedule When to Block Internet Sites and Services. 49 Avoid Blocking on a Trusted Computer . 50 Set Up Security Event Email Notifications . 51 Chapter 6 Specify Network Settings View or Change the WAN Settings . 54 Set Up a Default DMZ Server . 55 Change the Routers Device Name . 56 Change the LAN TCP/IP Settings . 57 Specify the IP Addresses That the Router Assigns. 58 Reserve LAN IP Addresses . 59 Use the WPS Wizard for WiFi Connections . 61 Specify Basic WiFi Settings . 61 Change the WiFi Security Option . 64 Use the Router as a Wireless Access Point. 65 Set Up a WiFi Guest Network . 66 Control the Wireless Radio. 68 Use the WiFi On/Off Button . 68 Enable or Disable the Wireless Radio . 68 Set Up a WiFi Schedule . 69 Specify WPS Settings . 70 Dynamic DNS . 71 Chapter 7 Manage Your Network View Router Information . 74 View Internet Port Information . 74 View Wireless Settings. 75 View Guest Network Settings. 76 Reboot the Router. 76 View Logs of Router Activity. 77 Monitor Internet Traffic . 78 Manage the Router Configuration File . 80 Back Up Settings . 80 Restore Configuration Settings. 81 Erase the Current Configuration Settings . 81 Change the admin Password . 82 Remote Management . 83 4 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Chapter 8 Specify Internet Port Settings Set Up Port Forwarding to a Local Server . 87 Add a Custom Port Forwarding Service. 88 Edit a Port Forwarding Service . 89 Delete a Port Forwarding Entry . 89 Application Example: Make a Local Web Server Public . 90 How the Router Implements the Port Forwarding Rule. 90 Set Up Port Triggering . 91 Add a Port Triggering Service . 91 Application Example: Port Triggering for Internet Relay Chat . 93 Chapter 9 Troubleshooting Forgotten Passwords. 95 admin Password. 95 WiFi Passwords . 95 WiFi Connections. 96 Changes Not Saved . 97 Troubleshoot with the LEDs . 98 Apply Power to the Router and Check the LEDs . 98 All LEDs Remain Lit . 98 Power LED Is Off or Blinking . 98 Power LED Stays Amber . 99 Internet LEDs Is Off . 99 WiFi LED Is Off . 99 Cannot Log In to the Router. 99 The Router Cannot Access the Internet . 100 Troubleshoot Internet Browsing . 101 Troubleshoot a PPPoE Internet Connection . 102 Troubleshoot Your Network Using the Ping Utility . 102 Test the LAN Path to Your Router. 103 Test the Path from Your Computer to a Remote Device . 103 Troubleshoot IP Addresses . 104 Appendix A Supplemental Information Factory Settings. 106 Technical Specifications . 108 5 DRAFT 1 1. Hardware Setup This chapter covers the following topics:
Unpack Your Router Front Panel Rear Panel Position Your Router Cable Your Router For more information about the topics covered in this manual, visit the support website at http://support.netgear.com. 6 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Unpack Your Router Your package contains the following items. Router Ethernet cable Power adapter Figure 1. Package contents Front Panel The router has status LEDs and buttons on the front. Power LED Internet LED WiFi LED WiFi On/Off button WPS button / LED Hardware Setup 7 Figure 2. Router front view DRAFT N300 Wireless Router You can use the LEDs to verify status and connections. The following table lists and describes each LED and button on the front panel of the router. Table 1. LED and button descriptions LED Description WiFi On/Off button with LED Pressing this button for two seconds turns the WiFi radio in the router on and off. If this LED is lit, the WiFi radio is on. If this LED is off, the WiFi radio is turned off and you cannot use WiFi to connect to the router. WPS button with LED This button lets you use WPS to join the WiFi network without typing the WiFi password. The WPS LED blinks during this process and then lights solid. Power Internet WiFi Solid green. The power is on, and the router is ready. Solid amber. When you apply power to the router, the Power LED lights and turns amber within a few seconds. This indicates that the self-test is running. Blinking green. A firmware update is in progress. Off. Power is not supplied to the router. Solid green. Solid amber. Off. Solid green. The wireless radio is operating. Off. The wireless radio is off. Hardware Setup 8 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Rear Panel The rear panel has the connections and button shown the following figure. Ethernet LAN ports Internet port Power adapter input Power On/Off button Figure 3. Router rear panel Position Your Router The router lets you access your network anywhere within the operating range of your wireless network. However, the operating distance or range of your wireless connection can vary significantly depending on the physical placement of your router. For example, the thickness and number of walls the wireless signal passes through can limit the range. Additionally, other wireless access points in and around your home might affect your routers signal. Wireless access points are routers, repeaters, WiFi range extenders, or any other device that emits a wireless signal for network access. Position your router according to the following guidelines:
Place your router near the center of the area where your computers and other devices operate, and within line of sight to your wireless devices. Make sure that the router is within reach of an AC power outlet and near Ethernet cables for wired computers. Place the router in an elevated location, minimizing the number walls and ceilings between the router and your other devices. Place the router away from electrical devices such as these:
- Ceiling fans
- Home security systems Hardware Setup 9 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router
- Microwaves
- Computers
- Base of a cordless phone
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2.4 GHz cordless phone Place the router away from large metal surfaces, large glass surfaces, and insulated walls such as these:
- Solid metal doors
- Aluminum studs
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- Mirrors
- Brick
- Concrete Fish tanks Cable Your Router To cable your router:
1. Connect the power adapter provided in the package to the router and plug the power adapter in to an electrical outlet. Internet Ethernet cable Power adapter Power On/Off button 2. Press the Power On/Off button on the rear panel of the router. The Power LED lights green. You can log in to the router to view or change its settings. Hardware Setup 10 DRAFT 2. Connect to the Network and Access the Router 2 This chapter contains the following sections:
Connect to the Network Types of Logins Log In to the Router 11 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Connect to the Network You can connect to the routers network through a wired or WiFi connection. If you set up your computer to use a static IP address, change the settings so that it uses Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP). Wired Connection You can connect your computer to the router using an Ethernet cable and join the routers local area network (LAN). To connect your computer to the router with an Ethernet cable:
1. Make sure that the router has power (its Power LED is lit). 2. Connect an Ethernet cable to an Ethernet port on your computer. 3. Connect the other end of the Ethernet cable to one of the numbered Ethernet ports. Your computer connects to the local area network (LAN). A message might display on your computer screen to notify you that an Ethernet cable is connected. WiFi Connection You can connect to the routers WiFi network with Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) or you can find and select the WiFi network. To use WPS to connect to the WiFi network:
1. Make sure that the router has power (its Power LED is lit). 2. Check the WPS instructions for your computer or wireless device. 3. Press the WPS button 4. Within two minutes, on your computer or WiFi device, press its WPS button or follow its on the router. instructions for WPS connections. Your computer or wireless device connects to the WiFi network. To find and select the WiFi network:
1. Make sure that the router has power (its Power LED is lit). 2. On your computer or wireless device, find and select the WiFi network. The WiFi network name is on the product label. 3. Join the WiFi network and enter the WiFi password. The password is on the product label. Your wireless device connects to the WiFi network. Connect to the Network and Access the Router 12 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Types of Logins Separate types of logins have different purposes. It is important that you understand the difference so that you know which login to use when. Several types of logins are associated with the router:
Internet provider login. The login that your Internet provider gave you logs you in to your Internet service. Your Internet provider gave you this login information in a letter or some other way. If you cannot find this login information, contact your Internet provider. WiFi network key or password. Your router is preset with a unique wireless network name (SSID) and password for wireless access. This information is on the router label. Modem router login.This logs you in to the router interface from a web browser as admin. Log In to the Router When you connect to the network (either with WiFi or with an Ethernet cable), you can use a web browser to access the router to view or change its settings. The first time you access the router, NETGEAR genie automatically checks to see if your router can connect to your Internet service. To log in to the router:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. Connect to the Network and Access the Router 13 DRAFT 3. Specify Initial Settings This chapter contains the following sections:
Use the Setup Wizard Manually Set Up the Internet Connection Specify IPv6 Internet Connections Change the MTU Size 3 14 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Use the Setup Wizard You can use the Setup Wizard to detect your Internet settings and automatically set up your router. The Setup Wizard is not the same as the genie screens that display the first time you connect to your router to set it up. To use the Setup Wizard:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Setup Wizard. 5. Select the Yes radio button. If you select No, you are taken to the Internet Setup screen (see Manually Set Up the Internet Connection ). 6. Click the Next button. The Setup Wizard searches your Internet connection for servers and protocols to determine your ISP configuration. When you connect to the Internet, the Setup Wizard Congratulations screen displays. Specify Initial Settings 15 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Manually Set Up the Internet Connection You can view or change the routers Internet connection settings. Specify an Internet Connection Without a Login To specify the Internet connection settings:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select Internet. Scroll to view more settings 5. For the Does your Internet connection require a login setting, leave the No radio button selected. If your Internet connection requires an account name or host name, type it in the Account Name (If Required) field. 6. Specify Initial Settings 16 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 7. If your Internet connection requires a domain name, type it in the Domain Name (If Required) field. For the other sections in this screen, the default settings usually work, but you can change them. 8. For the Internet IP Address setting, select one of the following radio buttons:
Get Dynamically from ISP. Your ISP uses DHCP to assign your IP address. Your ISP automatically assigns these addresses. Use Static IP Address. Enter the IP address, IP subnet mask, and the gateway IP address that your ISP assigned. The gateway is the ISP router to which your router connects. 9. For the Domain Name Server (DNS) Address setting, select one of the following radio buttons:
Get Automatically from ISP. Your ISP uses DHCP to assign your DNS servers. Your ISP automatically assigns this address. Use These DNS Servers. If you know that your ISP requires specific servers, select this option. Enter the IP address of your ISPs primary DNS server. If a secondary DNS server address is available, enter it also. 10. For the Router MAC Address setting, select one of the following radio buttons:
Use Default Address. Use the default MAC address. Use Computer MAC Address. The router captures and uses the MAC address of the computer that you are now using. You must use the one computer that the ISP allows. Use This MAC Address. Enter the MAC address that you want to use. 11. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved. 12. Click the Test button to test your Internet connection. If the NETGEAR website does not display within one minute, see Chapter 14, Troubleshooting. Specify an Internet Connection That Uses a Login To view or change the basic Internet setup:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. Specify Initial Settings 17 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select Internet. Scroll to view more settings 5. 6. 7. In the Does your Internet connection require a login section of the screen, select the Yes radio button. The screen adjusts. In the Internet Service Provider list, select the encapsulation method PPPoE, PPPoA, or L2TP. In the Login field, enter the login name your Internet provider gave you. This login name is often an email address. In the Password field, type the password that you use to log in to your Internet service. If your ISP requires a service name, type it in the Service Name (if Required) field. 8. 9. 10. In the Connection Mode drop-down list, select Always On, Dial on Demand, or Manually Connect. 11. To change the number of minutes until the Internet login times, out, in the Idle Timeout (In minutes) field, type the number of minutes. This is how long the router keeps the Internet connection active when no one on the network is using the Internet connection. A value of 0 (zero) means never log out. 12. In the Internet IP Address section, select one of the following radio buttons:
Get Dynamically from ISP. Your ISP uses DHCP to assign your IP address. Your ISP automatically assigns these addresses. Use Static IP Address. Enter the IP address, IP subnet mask, and the gateway IP address that your ISP assigned. The gateway is the ISP router to which your router connects. Specify Initial Settings 18 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 13. In the Domain Name Server (DNS) Address section, select one of the following radio buttons:
Get Automatically from ISP. Your ISP uses DHCP to assign your DNS servers. Your ISP automatically assigns this address. Use These DNS Servers. If you know that your ISP requires specific servers, select this option. Enter the IP address of your ISPs primary DNS server. If a secondary DNS server address is available, enter it also. 14. In the Router MAC Address section of the screen, select one of the following radio buttons:
Use Default Address. Use the default MAC address. Use Computer MAC Address. The router captures and uses the MAC address of the computer that you are now using. You must use the one computer that the ISP allows. Use This MAC Address. Enter the MAC address that you want to use. 15. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved. 16. Click the Test button to test your Internet connection. If the NETGEAR website does not display within one minute, see Chapter 14, Troubleshooting. Specify IPv6 Internet Connections You can set up an IPv6 Internet connection if genie does not detect it automatically. To set up an IPv6 Internet connection:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > IPv6. 5. In the Internet Connection Type list, select the IPv6 connection type. Your Internet service provider (ISP) can provide this information. If your ISP did not provide details, select IPv6 Tunnel. If you are not sure, select Auto Detect so that the router detects the IPv6 type that is in use. Specify Initial Settings 19 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router If your Internet connection does not use PPPoE, DHCP, or fixed, but is IPv6, select Auto Config. For more information about IPv6 Internet connection, see the following sections. 6. Click the Apply button. Your changes are saved. Requirements for Entering IPv6 Addresses IPv6 addresses are denoted by eight groups of hexadecimal quartets that are separated by colons. You can reduce any four-digit group of zeros within an IPv6 address to a single zero or omit it. The following errors invalidate an IPv6 address:
More than eight groups of hexadecimal quartets More than four hexadecimal characters in a quartet More than two colons in a row IPv6 Auto Detect To set up an IPv6 Internet connection through auto detection:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > IPv6. The IPv6 screen displays. In the Internet Connection Type list, select Auto Detect. 5. Specify Initial Settings 20 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router The screen adjusts:
The router automatically detects the information in the following fields:
Connection Type. This field indicates the connection type that is detected. Routers IPv6 Address on WAN. This field shows the IPv6 address that is acquired for the routers WAN (or Internet) interface. The number after the slash (/) is the length of the prefix, which is also indicated by the underline (_) under the IPv6 address. If no address is acquired, the field displays Not Available. Routers IPv6 Address on LAN. This field shows the IPv6 address that is acquired for the routers LAN interface. The number after the slash (/) is the length of the prefix, which is also indicated by the underline (_) under the IPv6 address. If no address is acquired, the field displays Not Available. 6. Specify how the router assigns IPv6 addresses to the devices on your home network (the LAN) by selecting one of the following radio buttons:
Use DHCP Server. This method passes more information to LAN devices, but some IPv6 systems might not support the DHCv6 client function. Auto Config. This is the default setting. 7. (Optional) Select the Use This Interface ID check box and specify the interface ID to be used for the IPv6 address of the routers LAN interface. If you do not specify an ID here, the router generates one automatically from its MAC address. 8. Click the Apply button. IPv6 Auto Config To set up an IPv6 Internet connection through auto configuration:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. Specify Initial Settings 21 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > IPv6. 5. The IPv6 screen displays. In the Internet Connection Type list, select Auto Config. The screen adjusts:
The router automatically detects the information in the following fields:
Routers IPv6 Address on WAN. This field shows the IPv6 address that is acquired for the routers WAN (or Internet) interface. The number after the slash (/) is the length of the prefix, which is also indicated by the underline (_) under the IPv6 address. If no address is acquired, the field displays Not Available. Routers IPv6 Address on LAN. This field shows the IPv6 address that is acquired for the routers LAN interface. The number after the slash (/) is the length of the prefix, which is also indicated by the underline (_) under the IPv6 address. If no address is acquired, the field displays Not Available. 6. (Optional) In the DHCP User Class (If Required) field, enter a host name. Most people can leave this field blank, but if your ISP has given you a specific host name, enter it here. 7. (Optional) In the DHCP Domain Name (If Required) field, enter a domain name. You can type the domain name of your IPv6 ISP. Do not enter the domain name for the IPv4 ISP here. For example, if your ISPs mail server is mail.xxx.yyy.zzz, type xxx.yyy.zzz as the domain name. If your ISP provided a domain name, type it in this field. For Specify Initial Settings 22 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router example, Earthlink Cable might require a host name of home, and Comcast sometimes supplies a domain name. 8. Specify how the router assigns IPv6 addresses to the devices on your home network (the LAN) by selecting one of the following radio buttons:
Use DHCP Server. This method passes more information to LAN devices, but some IPv6 systems might not support the DHCv6 client function. Auto Config. This is the default setting. 9. (Optional) Select the Use This Interface ID check box and specify the interface ID that you want to be used for the IPv6 address of the routers LAN interface. If you do not specify an ID here, the router generates one automatically from its MAC address. 10. Click the Apply button. IPv6 6to4 Tunnel The remote relay router is the router to which your router creates a 6to4 tunnel. Make sure that the IPv4 Internet connection is working before you apply the 6to4 tunnel settings for the IPv6 connection. To set up an IPv6 Internet connection by using a 6to4 tunnel:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > IPv6. The IPv6 screen displays. In the Internet Connection Type list, select 6to4 Tunnel. 5. Specify Initial Settings 23 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router The screen adjusts:
The router automatically detects the information in the Routers IPv6 Address on LAN field. This field shows the IPv6 address that is acquired for the routers LAN interface. The number after the slash (/) is the length of the prefix, which is also indicated by the underline (_) under the IPv6 address. If no address is acquired, the field displays Not Available. 6. Configure the remote 6to4 relay router settings by selecting one of the following radio buttons:
Auto. Your router uses any remote relay router that is available on the Internet. This is the default setting. Static IP Address. Enter the static IPv4 address of the remote relay router. Your IPv6 ISP usually provides this address. 7. Specify how the router assigns IPv6 addresses to the devices on your home network (the LAN) by selecting one of the following radio buttons:
Use DHCP Server. This method passes more information to LAN devices, but some IPv6 systems might not support the DHCv6 client function. Auto Config. This is the default setting. 8. (Optional) Select the Use This Interface ID check box and specify the interface ID that you want to be used for the IPv6 address of the routers LAN interface. If you do not specify an ID here, the router generates one automatically from its MAC address. 9. Click the Apply button. Specify Initial Settings 24 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router IPv6 Pass Through In pass-through mode, the router works as a Layer 2 Ethernet switch with two ports (LAN and WAN Ethernet ports) for IPv6 packets. The router does not process any IPv6 header packets. To set up a pass-through IPv6 Internet connection:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > IPv6. 5. The IPv6 screen displays. In the Internet Connection Type list, select Pass Through. The screen adjusts, but no additional fields display. 6. Click the Apply button. IPv6 Fixed To set up a fixed IPv6 Internet connection:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > IPv6. The IPv6 screen displays. In the Internet Connection Type list, select Fixed. 5. Specify Initial Settings 25 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router The screen adjusts:
6. Configure the fixed IPv6 addresses for the WAN connection:
IPv6 Address/Prefix Length. The IPv6 address and prefix length of the router WAN interface. Default IPv6 Gateway. The IPv6 address of the default IPv6 gateway for the routers WAN interface. Primary DNS Server. The primary DNS server that resolves IPv6 domain name records for the router. Secondary DNS Server. The secondary DNS server that resolves IPv6 domain name records for the router. Note:
If you do not specify the DNS servers, the router uses the DNS servers that are configured for the IPv4 Internet connection on the Internet Setup screen. (See Manually Set Up the Internet Connection on page 16.) 7. Specify how the router assigns IPv6 addresses to the devices on your home network (the LAN) by selecting one of the following radio buttons:
Use DHCP Server. This method passes more information to LAN devices, but some IPv6 systems might not support the DHCv6 client function. 8. Auto Config. This is the default setting. In the IPv6 Address/Prefix Length fields, specify the static IPv6 address and prefix length of the routers LAN interface. If you do not specify an ID here, the router generates one automatically from its MAC address. 9. Click the Apply button. Specify Initial Settings 26 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router IPv6 DHCP To set up an IPv6 Internet connection with a DHCP server:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > IPv6. 5. The IPv6 screen displays. In the Internet Connection Type list, select DHCP. The screen adjusts:
The router automatically detects the information in the following fields:
Routers IPv6 Address on WAN. This field shows the IPv6 address that is acquired for the routers WAN (or Internet) interface. The number after the slash (/) is the length of the prefix, which is also indicated by the underline (_) under the IPv6 address. If no address is acquired, the field displays Not Available. Routers IPv6 Address on LAN. This field shows the IPv6 address that is acquired for the routers LAN interface. The number after the slash (/) is the length of the prefix, which is also indicated by the underline (_) under the IPv6 address. If no address is acquired, the field displays Not Available. 6. (Optional) In the DHCP User Class (If Required) field, enter a host name. Specify Initial Settings 27 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Most people can leave this field blank, but if your ISP gave you a specific host name, enter it here. 7. (Optional) In the Domain Name (If Required) field, enter a domain name. You can type the domain name of your IPv6 ISP. Do not enter the domain name for the IPv4 ISP here. For example, if your ISPs mail server is mail.xxx.yyy.zzz, type xxx.yyy.zzz as the domain name. If your ISP provided a domain name, type it in this field. For example, Earthlink Cable might require a host name of home, and Comcast sometimes supplies a domain name. 8. Specify how the router assigns IPv6 addresses to the devices on your home network (the LAN) by selecting one of the following radio buttons:
Use DHCP Server. This method passes more information to LAN devices, but some IPv6 systems might not support the DHCv6 client function. Auto Config. This is the default setting. 9. (Optional) Select the Use This Interface ID check box and specify the interface ID that you want to be used for the IPv6 address of the routers LAN interface. If you do not specify an ID here, the router generates one automatically from its MAC address. 10. Click the Apply button. IPv6 PPPoE To set up a PPPoE IPv6 Internet connection:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > IPv6. The IPv6 screen displays. In the Internet Connection Type list, select PPPoE. 5. Specify Initial Settings 28 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router The screen adjusts:
The router automatically detects the information in the following fields:
Routers IPv6 Address on WAN. This field shows the IPv6 address that is acquired for the routers WAN (or Internet) interface. The number after the slash (/) is the length of the prefix, which is also indicated by the underline (_) under the IPv6 address. If no address is acquired, the field displays Not Available. Routers IPv6 Address on LAN. This field shows the IPv6 address that is acquired for the routers LAN interface. The number after the slash (/) is the length of the prefix, which is also indicated by the underline (_) under the IPv6 address. If no address is acquired, the field displays Not Available. 6. 7. 8. In the Login field, enter the login information for the ISP connection. This is usually the name that you use in your email address. For example, if your main mail account is JerAB@ISP.com, you would type JerAB in this field. Some ISPs (like Mindspring, Earthlink, and T-DSL) require that you use your full email address when you log in. If your ISP requires your full email address, type it in this field. In the Password field, enter the password for the ISP connection. In the Service Name field, enter a service name. If your ISP did not provide a service name, leave this field blank. Note: The default setting of the Connection Mode field is Always On to provide a steady IPv6 connection. The router never terminates the connection. If the connection is terminated, for example, when the modem is turned off, the router attempts to reestablish the connection immediately after the PPPoE connection becomes available again. 9. Specify how the router assigns IPv6 addresses to the devices on your home network (the LAN) by selecting one of the following radio buttons:
Specify Initial Settings 29 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Use DHCP Server. This method passes more information to LAN devices, but some IPv6 systems might not support the DHCv6 client function. Auto Config. This is the default setting. 10. (Optional) Select the Use This Interface ID check box and specify the interface ID that you want to be used for the IPv6 address of the routers LAN interface. If you do not specify an ID here, the router generates one automatically from its MAC address. 11. Click the Apply button. Change the MTU Size The maximum transmission unit (MTU) is the largest data packet a network device transmits. When one network device communicates across the Internet with another, the data packets travel through many devices along the way. If a device in the data path has a lower MTU setting than the other devices, the data packets must be split or fragmented to accommodate the device with the smallest MTU. The best MTU setting for NETGEAR equipment is often the default value. In some situations, changing the value fixes one problem but causes another. Leave the MTU unchanged unless one of these situations occurs:
You experience problems connecting to your ISP or other Internet service, and the technical support of either the ISP or NETGEAR recommends changing the MTU setting. These web-based applications might require an MTU change:
- A secure website that does not open, or displays only part of a web page
- Yahoo email
- MSN portal
- America Onlines DSL service You use VPN and have severe performance problems. You used a program to optimize MTU for performance reasons, and now you have connectivity or performance problems. Note: An incorrect MTU setting can cause Internet communication problems. For example, you might not be able to access certain websites, frames within websites, secure login pages, or FTP or POP servers. To change the MTU size:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the network. Specify Initial Settings 30 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 2. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Setup > WAN Setup. In the MTU Size field, enter a value from 64 to 1500. 5. 6. Click the Apply button. Your change is saved. If you suspect an MTU problem, a common solution is to change the MTU to 1400. If you are willing to experiment, you can gradually reduce the MTU from the maximum value of 1500 until the problem goes away. The following table describes common MTU sizes and applications. Table 2. Common MTU sizes MTU 1500 1492 1472 1468 1460 1436 1400 576 Application The largest Ethernet packet size. This setting is typical for connections that do not use PPPoE or VPN, and is the default value for NETGEAR routers, adapters, and switches. Used in PPPoE environments. Maximum size to use for pinging. (Larger packets are fragmented.) Used in some DHCP environments. Usable by AOL if you do not have large email attachments, for example. Used in PPTP environments or with VPN. Maximum size for AOL DSL. Typical value to connect to dial-up ISPs. Specify Initial Settings 31 DRAFT 4 4. Optimize Performance This chapter contains the following sections:
Prioritize Internet Traffic with Quality of Service Optimize Internet Gaming with Upstream QoS Optimize Internet Streaming with QoS Wi-Fi Multimedia Quality of Service Improve Network Connections with Universal Plug and Play 32 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Prioritize Internet Traffic with Quality of Service You can use Quality of Service (QoS) to assign high priority to gaming and streaming video from the Internet. Internet Downstream QoS
(video streaming) Upstream QoS
(gaming) Figure 4. You can prioritize downstream traffic, upstream traffic, or both Optimize Internet Gaming with Upstream QoS Upstream Quality of Service (QoS) assigns high priority to Internet traffic from your Xbox gaming system. Internet High priority traffic Best effort traffic Figure 5. Upstream QoS assigns high priority to gaming traffic from your Xbox NETGEAR recommends that only gamers enable the Upstream QoS feature. If you do not game and you turn on this feature, some applications might not perform as well as usual. Optimize Performance 33 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router To enable upstream QoS:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter http://www.routerlogin.net or http://www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Setup > QoS Setup. 5. Select the Enable Upstream QoS (Optimized for Gaming) check box. 6. Specify the maximum uplink bandwidth for your Internet connection:
If you know what your uplink bandwidth is, type it in the Uplink bandwidth Maximum field. If you are not sure, click the http://www.speedtest link. Speedtest verifies the upstream speed of your Internet connection. The Uplink bandwidth Maximum field displays the result of the test. 7. Click the Apply button. The router assigns a high priority to Internet traffic from your gaming devices to the Internet. Optimize Performance 34 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Optimize Internet Streaming with QoS You can use Quality of Service (QoS) to assign high priority to Internet streaming, applications, and services. Internet High priority traffic Best effort traffic Figure 6. QoS can assign high priority to streaming from the Internet NETGEAR recommends that you enable this feature only if you use streaming Internet. When QoS assigns a high priority to streaming video, it also assigns lower priority to the rest of your Internet traffic. That means other tasks like downloading content from the Internet take longer. To enable QoS for Internet access:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter http://www.routerlogin.net or http://www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Setup > QoS Setup. 5. Select the Turn Internet Access QoS On check box. Optimize Performance 35 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router The screen adjusts. 6. Click the Apply button. The router assigns a high priority to video streaming from the Internet traffic. Add QoS Rules by Service To add a QoS rule for a service:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter http://www.routerlogin.net or http://www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Setup > QoS Setup. 5. Select the Turn Internet Access QoS On check box. 6. Select the Add Rules By Service radio button. Optimize Performance 36 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router The screen adjusts. 7. 8. In the Applications list, select an application or service. In the Priority list, select the priority for the rule. The priority selections correspond to the queues in the QoS rules table. 9. Click the Add button. The service displays in the QoS rules table. 10. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved. Add a QoS Rule by Device To add a QoS rule for a service:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, http://www.routerlogin.net or http://www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Setup > QoS Setup. Optimize Performance 37 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 5. Select the Turn Internet Access QoS On check box.The screen adjusts. 6. Leave the Add Rules By Device radio button selected. Computers and devices that are connected to the network display in the MAC Device List. By default, each device has a normal priority. 7. Select or specify the device:
To select a device in the MAC Device List, select its radio button. To specify a device that is not in the MAC Device List, complete the QoS Policy for, MAC Address, and Device Name fields and click the Add button. The device is listed in a queue in the QoS rules table with its default rule priority. The rule priority corresponds to the queues. Note: To specify a device rules priority, edit the rule. For more information, see Edit a QoS Rule. 8. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved. Edit a QoS Rule To edit a QoS rule:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter http://www.routerlogin.net or http://www.routerlogin.com. Optimize Performance 38 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Setup > QoS Setup. 5. Select the By Service radio button. 6. 7. Click the Edit button. In the QoS rules table, click the application or service to select it. The QoS - Priority Rules screen displays. In the Priority list, select a priority level. 8. 9. Click the Apply button. The rules priority is updated in the QoS rules table on the QoS Setup screen. Delete a QoS Rule To delete a QoS rule:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter http://www.routerlogin.net or http://www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Setup > QoS Setup. 5. Select the By Service radio button. 6. 7. Click the Delete button. In the QoS rules table, click the application or service to select it. The rule is deleted. Optimize Performance 39 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Delete All QoS Rules To delete all QoS rules:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter http://www.routerlogin.net or http://www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Setup > QoS Setup. 5. Select the By Service radio button. 6. Click the Delete All button. The ruled are deleted. Wi-Fi Multimedia Quality of Service Wi-Fi Multimedia Quality of Service (WMM QoS) prioritizes wireless voice and video traffic over the WiFi link. WMM QoS is automatically enabled for the router. WMM QoS prioritizes wireless data packets from different applications based on four access categories: voice, video, best effort, and background. For an application to receive the benefits of WMM QoS, both it and the client running that application must have WMM enabled. Legacy applications that do not support WMM and applications that do not require QoS are assigned to the best effort category, which receives a lower priority than voice and video. To disable WMM QoS:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter http://www.routerlogin.net or http://www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. Optimize Performance 40 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 4. Select ADVANCED > Setup > QoS Setup. 5. Clear the Enable WMM (Wi-Fi multimedia) settings check box. 6. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved. Improve Network Connections with Universal Plug and Play Universal Plug and Play (UPnP) helps devices, such as Internet appliances and computers, access the network and connect to other devices as needed. UPnP devices can automatically discover the services from other registered UPnP devices on the network. If you use applications such as multiplayer gaming, peer-to-peer connections, or real-time communications such as instant messaging or remote assistance (a feature in Windows XP), enable UPnP. To enable Universal Plug and Play:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. Optimize Performance 41 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > UPnP. 5. Select the Turn UPnP On check box. By default, this check box is selected. If the Turn UPnP On check box is cleared, the router does not allow any device to automatically control router resources, such as port forwarding. 6. Type the advertisement period in minutes. The advertisement period specifies how often the router broadcasts its UPnP information. This value can range from 1 to 1440 minutes. The default period is 30 minutes. Shorter durations ensure that control points have current device status at the expense of more network traffic. Longer durations can compromise the freshness of the device status, but can significantly reduce network traffic. 7. Type the advertisement time to live in hops. The time to live for the advertisement is measured in hops (steps) for each UPnP packet sent. Hops are the steps a packet takes between routers. The number of hops can range from 1 to 255. The default value for the advertisement time to live is 4 hops, which should be fine for most home networks. If you notice that some devices are not being updated or reached correctly, it might be necessary to increase this value. 8. Click the Apply button. The UPnP Portmap Table displays the IP address of each UPnP device that is accessing the router and which ports (internal and external) that device has opened. The UPnP Portmap Table also displays what type of port is open and whether that port is still active for each IP address. To refresh the information in the UPnP Portmap Table:
Click the Refresh button. Optimize Performance 42 DRAFT 5. Control Access to the Internet 5 This chapter explains how to prevent objectionable content from reaching the computers and other devices that are connected to your network. This chapter includes the following sections:
Set Up Parental Controls Use Keywords to Block Internet Sites Block Services from the Internet Schedule When to Block Internet Sites and Services Avoid Blocking on a Trusted Computer Set Up Security Event Email Notifications 43 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Set Up Parental Controls The first time that you select Parental Controls from the BASIC Home screen, your browser goes to the Live Parental Controls website, where you can learn more about Live Parental Controls and download the application. To set up Live Parental Controls:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select Parental Controls. 5. Click either the Windows Users or Mac Users button. 6. Follow the onscreen instructions to download and install the NETGEAR Live Parental Controls management utility. Control Access to the Internet 44 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router After installation, Live Parental Controls automatically starts. 7. Click the Next button. 8. Read the note, and click the Next button again to proceed. Because Live Parental Controls uses free OpenDNS accounts, you are prompted to log in or create a free account. 9. Select a radio button as follows:
If you already have an OpenDNS account, leave the Yes radio button selected. If you do not have an OpenDNS account, select the No radio button. 10. Click the Next button. If you are creating an account, the following screen displays:
Control Access to the Internet 45 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 11. Complete the fields and click the Next button. After you log on or create your account, the filtering level screen displays:
12. Select a filtering level and click the Next button. The Setup is Complete screen displays. 13. Click the Take me to the status screen button. Parental controls are now set up for the router. The genie BASIC Home screen displays Parental Controls as Enabled. Use Keywords to Block Internet Sites You can use keywords to block certain Internet sites from your network. You can use blocking all the time or based on a schedule. To block Internet sites:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. Control Access to the Internet 46 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 4. Select ADVANCED > Security > Block Sites. 5. Select a keyword blocking option:
Per Schedule. Use keyword blocking according to ta schedule you set. (See Schedule When to Block Internet Sites and Services on page 49.) 6. Always. Use keyword blocking continuously. In the keyword field, enter a keyword or domain that you want to block. Here are some sample entries:
Specify XXX to block http://www.badstuff.com/xxx.html. Specify .com if you want to allow only sites with domain suffixes such as .edu or .gov. Enter a period (.) to block all Internet browsing access. 7. Click the Add Keyword button. The keyword is added to the keyword list. The keyword list supports up to 32 entries. 8. Click the Apply button. Keyword blocking takes effect. To delete keywords from the list:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. Control Access to the Internet 47 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Security > Block Sites. 5. Do one of the following:
To delete a single word, select it and click the Delete Keyword button. The keyword is removed from the list. To delete all keywords on the list, click the Clear List button. All keywords are removed from the list. 6. Click the Apply button. Your changes are saved. Block Services from the Internet You can block Internet services on your network based on the type of service. You can block services all the time or based on a schedule. To block services:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Security > Block Services. 5. Specify when to block the services:
Control Access to the Internet 48 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router To block the services all the time, select the Always radio button. To block the services based on a schedule, select the Per Schedule radio button. For information about how to specify the schedule, see Schedule When to Block Internet Sites and Services on page 49. 6. Click the Add button. 7. To add a service that is in the Service Type list, select the application or service. The settings for this service automatically display in the fields. 8. To add a service or application that is not the list, select User Defined. a. From the Protocol list, select a protocol. If you are not sure what protocol the service or application uses, select TCP/UDP. b. Enter the starting port and ending port numbers:
If the service uses a single port number, enter that number in both fields. To find out which port numbers the service or application uses, you can contact the publisher of the application, ask user groups or news groups, or search on the Internet. 9. To specify how to filter the services, select a radio button:
Only This IP Address. Block services for a single computer. IP Address Range. Block services for a range of computers with consecutive IP addresses on your network. All lP Addresses. Block services for all computers on your network. 10. Click the Add button. Your changes are saved. Schedule When to Block Internet Sites and Services When you schedule blocking, the same schedule is used to block sites and to block services. For information about how to specify what you want the router to block, see Use Keywords to Block Internet Sites on page 46 and Block Services from the Internet on page 48. Control Access to the Internet 49 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router To schedule blocking:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Security > Schedule. 5. Specify when to block keywords and services:
Days to Block. Select the check box for each day that you want to block the keywords or select the Every Day check box, which automatically selects the check boxes for all days. Time of Day to Block. Select a start and end time in 24-hour format, or select All Day for 24-hour blocking. 6. Select your time zone from the list. 7. If you live in an area that observes daylight saving time, select the Automatically adjust for daylight savings time check box. 8. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved. Avoid Blocking on a Trusted Computer You can exempt one trusted computer from blocking. The computer you exempt must have a fixed IP address. You can use the reserved IP address feature to specify the IP address. See Reserve LAN IP Addresses on page 59. To specify a trusted computer:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. Control Access to the Internet 50 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 4. Select ADVANCED > Security > Block Sites. 5. Scroll down and select the Allow trusted IP address to visit blocked sites check box. In the Trusted IP Address field, enter the IP address of the trusted computer. 6. 7. Click the Apply button. Your changes are saved. Set Up Security Event Email Notifications The router can email you its logs. The log records router activity and security events such as attempts to access blocked sites or services. To set up email notifications:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Security > E-mail. 5. Select the Turn E-mail Notification On check box. Control Access to the Internet 51 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 6. In the Your Outgoing Mail Server field, enter the name of your Internet provider outgoing
(SMTP) mail server (such as mail.myISP.com). You might be able to find this information in the configuration screen of your email program. If you leave this field blank, log and alert messages are not sent. 7. Enter the email address to which logs and alerts are sent in the Send to This E-mail Address field. This email address is also used for the From address. If this field is blank, log and alert messages are not sent. If your outgoing email server requires authentication, select the My Mail Server requires authentication check box. a. b. In the User Name field, type the user name for the outgoing email server. In the Password field, type the password for the outgoing email server. 8. 9. To send alerts when someone attempts to visit a blocked site, select the Send Alerts Immediately check box. 10. To send logs based on a schedule, specify these settings:
From Send logs according to this schedule drop-down list, select the schedule type. From the Day drop-down list, select the day. From the Time drop-down list, select the time, and select the am or pm radio button. 11. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved. Logs are sent according to the schedule that you set. If the log fills up before the specified time, it is sent. After the log is sent, it is cleared from the router memory. If the router cannot email the log and the log buffer fills up, the router overwrites the log. Control Access to the Internet 52 DRAFT 6 6. Specify Network Settings This chapter includes the following sections:
View or Change the WAN Settings Set Up a Default DMZ Server Change the Routers Device Name Change the LAN TCP/IP Settings Specify the IP Addresses That the Router Assigns Reserve LAN IP Addresses Use the WPS Wizard for WiFi Connections Specify Basic WiFi Settings Change the WiFi Security Option Use the Router as a Wireless Access Point Set Up a WiFi Guest Network Control the Wireless Radio Specify WPS Settings Your settings are saved. Dynamic DNS 53 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router View or Change the WAN Settings You can view the wide area network (WAN) settings for the Internet port. You can set up a DMZ (demilitarized zone) server, change the maximum transmit unit (MTU) size, and enable the router to respond to a ping to its WAN (Internet) port. To view or change the WAN settings:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Setup > WAN Setup. 5. View or change the following settings:
Disable Port Scan and DoS Protection. DoS protection protects your LAN against denial of service attacks such as Syn flood, Smurf Attack, Ping of Death, and many others. Select this check box only in special circumstances. Default DMZ Server. This feature is sometimes helpful when you are playing online games or videoconferencing, but it makes the firewall security less effective. See Set Up a Default DMZ Server on page 55. Respond to Ping on Internet Port. This feature allows your router to be discovered. Use this feature only as a diagnostic tool or if you have a specific reason. Disable IGMP Proxying. IGMP proxying allows a computer on the local area network
(LAN) to receive the multicast traffic it is interested in from the Internet. If you do not need this feature, you can select this check box to disable it. Specify Network Settings 54 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router MTU Size (in bytes). The normal MTU (maximum transmit unit) value for most Ethernet networks is 1500 bytes, or 1492 bytes for PPPoE connections. Change the MTU only if you are sure that it is necessary for your Internet connection. See Change the MTU Size on page 30. 6. Click the Apply button. Your changes are saved. Set Up a Default DMZ Server The default DMZ server feature is helpful when you are using some online games and videoconferencing applications that are incompatible with Network Address Translation
(NAT). The router is programmed to recognize some of these applications and to work correctly with them, but other applications might not function well. In some cases, one local computer can run the application correctly if the IP address for that computer is entered as the default DMZ server. WARNING:
DMZ servers pose a security risk. A computer designated as the default DMZ server loses much of the protection of the firewall and is exposed to exploits from the Internet. If compromised, the DMZ server computer can be used to attack other computers on your network. The router usually detects and discards incoming traffic from the Internet that is not a response to one of your local computers or a service that you have configured in the Port Forwarding/Port Triggering screen. Instead of discarding this traffic, you can have the router forward the traffic to one computer on your network. This computer is called the default DMZ server. To set up a default DMZ server:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Setup > WAN Setup. 5. Select the Default DMZ Server check box. Specify Network Settings 55 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 6. Type the IP address. 7. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved. Change the Routers Device Name The routers device name is WNR2000v5. This device name displays in a file manager when you browse your network. To change the routers device name:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Setup > LAN Setup. In the Device Name field, type a new name. 5. 6. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved. Specify Network Settings 56 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Change the LAN TCP/IP Settings The router is preconfigured to use private IP addresses on the LAN side and to act as a DHCP server. The routers default LAN IP configuration is as follows:
LAN IP address. 192.168.1.1 Subnet mask. 255.255.255.0 These addresses are part of the designated private address range for use in private networks and are suitable for most applications. If your network requires a different IP addressing scheme, you can change these settings. You might want to change these settings if you need a specific IP subnet that one or more devices on the network use, or if you have competing subnets with the same IP scheme. To change the LAN TCP/IP settings:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Setup > LAN Setup. 5. 6. In the IP Address field, type the IP address. In the IP Subnet Mask field, type the subnet mask of the router. Specify Network Settings 57 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router The IP address and subnet mask identify which addresses are local to a specific device and which must be reached through a gateway or router. 7. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved. If you changed the LAN IP address of the router, you are disconnected when this change takes effect. To reconnect, close your browser, relaunch it, and log in to the router. Specify the IP Addresses That the Router Assigns By default, the router acts as a Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) server. The router assigns IP, DNS server, and default gateway addresses to all computers connected to the LAN. The assigned default gateway address is the LAN address of the router. These addresses must be part of the same IP address subnet as the routers LAN IP address. Using the default addressing scheme, define a range between 192.168.0.2 and 192.168.0.254, although you can save part of the range for devices with fixed addresses. The router delivers the following parameters to any LAN device that requests DHCP:
An IP address from the range that you have defined Subnet mask Gateway IP address (the routers LAN IP address) DNS server IP address (the routers LAN IP address) To specify the pool of IP addresses that the router assigns:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. Specify Network Settings 58 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 4. Select ADVANCED > Setup > LAN Setup. 5. Specify the range of IP addresses that the router assigns:
a. In the Starting IP Address field, type the lowest number in the range. This IP address must be in the same subnet as the router. b. In the Ending IP Address field, type the number at the end of the range of IP addresses. This IP address must be in the same subnet as the router. 6. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved. Reserve LAN IP Addresses When you specify a reserved IP address for a computer on the LAN, that computer always receives the same IP address each time it accesses the routers DHCP server. Assign reserved IP addresses to computers or servers that require permanent IP settings. To reserve an IP address:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. Specify Network Settings 59 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 4. Select ADVANCED > Setup > LAN Setup. 5. 6. In the Address Reservation section of the screen, click the Add button. In the IP Address field, type the IP address to assign to the computer or server. Choose an IP address from the routers LAN subnet, such as 192.168.0.x. 7. Type the MAC address of the computer or server. Tip: If the computer is already on your network, you can copy its MAC address from the Attached Devices screen and paste it here. 8. Click the Apply button. The reserved address is entered into the table. The reserved address is not assigned until the next time the computer contacts the routers DHCP server. Reboot the computer, or access its IP configuration and force a DHCP release and renew. To edit a reserved address entry:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the network. 2. Type www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Setup > LAN Setup. 5. Select the radio button next to the reserved address. 6. Click the Edit button. 7. Change the settings. 8. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved. To delete a reserved address entry:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. Specify Network Settings 60 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Setup > LAN Setup. 5. Select the radio button next to the reserved address. 6. Click the Delete button. The address is removed. Use the WPS Wizard for WiFi Connections The WPS Wizard helps you add a wireless computer or device to your WiFi network without typing the WiFi password. To use the WPS Wizard:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > WPS Wizard. 5. Click the Next button. 6. Select a setup method:
Push button. Click the WPS button on this screen. PIN Number. The screen adjusts. Enter the client security PIN, and click the Next button. 7. Within two minutes, go to the client device and use its WPS software to connect to the WiFi network. The WPS process automatically sets up your wireless computer with the network password when it connects. The router WPS screen displays a confirmation message. Specify Basic WiFi Settings The router comes with preset security. This means that the WiFi network name (SSID), network key (password), and security option (encryption protocol) are preset in the factory. Specify Network Settings 61 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router You can find the preset SSID and password on the router label. The preset SSID and password are uniquely generated for every device to maximize your wireless security. NETGEAR recommends that you do not change your preset security settings. If you change your preset security settings, make a note of the new settings and store the note in a safe place where you can easily find it. If you use a wireless computer to change the SSID or other wireless security settings, you are disconnected when you click the Apply button. To avoid this problem, use a computer with a wired connection to access the router. To specify basic wireless settings:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select Wireless. 5. To control the SSID broadcast, select or clear the Enable SSID Broadcast check box. When this check box is selected, the router broadcasts its network name (SSID) so that it displays when you scan for local WiFi networks on your computer or wireless device. 6. To change the SSID, type a new name in the Name (SSID) field. Specify Network Settings 62 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router The name can be up to 32 characters long and is case-sensitive. The default SSID is randomly generated and is on the routers label. If you change the name, make sure to write down the new name and keep it in a safe place. In the Region list, select your region. In some locations, you cannot change this setting. 7. 8. To change the wireless channel, select a number in the Channel list. In some regions, not all channels are available. Do not change the channel unless you experience interference (shown by lost connections or slow data transfers). If this happens, experiment with different channels to see which is the best. When you use multiple access points, it is better if adjacent access points use different channels to reduce interference. NETGEAR recommends channel spacing between adjacent access points of four channels (for example, use Channels 1 and 5, or 6 and 10). 9. To change the mode, select it from the Mode list. Up to 150 Mbps is the default setting, which allows 802.11n and 802.11g wireless devices to join the network. g & b supports up to 54 Mbps. The 300-Mbps setting allows 802.11n devices to connect at this speed. 10. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved. If you used WiFi to connect to the network and you changed the SSID, you are disconnected from the network. 11. Make sure that you can connect with WiFi to the network with its new settings. If you cannot connect, check the following:
Is your computer or wireless device connected to another WiFi network in your area?
Some wireless devices automatically connect to the first open network without wireless security that they discover. Is your computer or wireless device trying to connect to your network with its old settings (before you changed the settings)? If so, update the wireless network selection in your computer or wireless device to match the current settings for your network. Specify Network Settings 63 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Change the WiFi Security Option Your router comes with preset WPA2 or WPA security. The password that you enter to connect to your network is unique to your router and is on the router label. NETGEAR recommends that you use the preset security, but you can change the password. NETGEAR recommends that you do not disable security. To change the WPA settings:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select Wireless. 5. Under Security Options, select a WPA option:
WPA2-PSK [AES]
WPA-PSK [TKIP] + WPA2-PSK [AES]
WPA/WPA2 Enterprise The WPA2 options use the newest standard for the strongest security but some older computers and wireless devices cannot use WPA2. By default, the WPA-PSK [TKIP] +
WPA2-PSK [AES] radio button is selected so that new or old computers and wireless devices can connect to the WiFi network by using either WPA2 or WPA security. The Passphrase field displays. In the Passphrase field, enter the network key (password) that you want to use. It is a text string from 8 to 63 characters. 6. 7. Write down the new password and keep it in a secure place for future reference. 8. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved. Specify Network Settings 64 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Use the Router as a Wireless Access Point You can set up the router to run as an access point (AP) on the same local network as another router. To set up the router as an AP:
1. Use an Ethernet cable to connect the Internet port of this router to a LAN port in the other router. Cable this port to a LAN port on another router 2. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the network. 3. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 4. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. Specify Network Settings 65 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 5. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Wireless AP. 6. Select the Enable AP Mode check box. 7. Scroll down and select the radio button for the IP address setting that you want to use:
Get dynamically from existing router. The other router on the network assigns an IP address to this router while this router is in AP mode. Enable fixed IP settings on this device (not recommended). Use this setting if you want to manually assign a specific IP address to this router while it is in AP mode. Using this option effectively requires advanced network experience. Note: To avoid interference with other routers or gateways in your network, NETGEAR recommends that you use different wireless settings on each router. You can also turn off the wireless radio on the other router or gateway and use the WNR2000v5 only for wireless client access. 8. Click the Apply button. The IP address of the router changes, and you are disconnected. To reconnect, close and restart your browser and type http://wwwrouterlogin.net. Set Up a WiFi Guest Network A guest network allows visitors at your home to use the Internet without using your wireless security key. You can add a guest network to each wireless network: 2.4 GHz b/g/n and 5.0 GHz a/n. To set up a guest network:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the network. Specify Network Settings 66 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 2. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select Guest Network. 5. Select any of the following wireless settings:
Enable Guest Network. When this check box is selected, the guest network is enabled, and guests can connect to your network using the SSID of this profile. Enable SSID Broadcast. If this check box is selected, the wireless access point broadcasts its name (SSID) to all wireless stations. Stations with no SSID can adopt the correct SSID for connections to this access point. Allow guest to see each other and access my local network. If this check box is selected, anyone who connects to this SSID has access to your local network, not just Internet access. 6. Give the guest network a name. The guest network name is case-sensitive and can be up to 32 characters. You then manually configure the wireless devices in your network to use the guest network name in addition to the main SSID. 7. Select a security option. The WPA2 options use the newest standard for the strongest security, but some older computers and wireless devices cannot use it. NETGEAR recommends that you select the WPA-PSK [TKIP] + WPA2-PSK [AES] radio button. This setting protects your WiFi network and lets computers and wireless devices can connect to the WiFi network by using either WPA2 or WPA security. 8. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved. Specify Network Settings 67 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Control the Wireless Radio The router has an internal wireless radio that broadcasts signals in the 2.4 GHz range. By default, this radio is on so that you can connect wirelessly to the router. When the wireless radio is off, you can still use an Ethernet cable for a LAN connection to the router. You can turn the wireless radio on and off with the WiFi On/Off button on the router, or you can log in to the router and enable or disable the wireless radios. If you are close to the router, it might be easier to press its WiFi On/Off button have already logged in, it might be easier to enable or disable the radios. If you are away from the router or Use the WiFi On/Off Button To turn the wireless radios off and on with the WiFi On/Off button:
on the router for two seconds. Press the WiFi On/Off button If you turn off the wireless radios, the WiFi On/Off LED and the WPS LED turn off. If you turn on the wireless radios, the WiFi On/Off LED and the WPS LED light. Enable or Disable the Wireless Radio If you used the WiFi On/Off button router to turn it back on. You must press the WiFi On/Off button to turn the wireless radio back on. to turn off the wireless radio, you cant log in to the again for two seconds To enable or disable the wireless radio:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. Specify Network Settings 68 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 4. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Wireless Settings. 5. Select or clear the Enable Wireless Router Radio check box. Clearing this check box turns off the WiFi feature of the router. 6. Click the Apply button. If you disabled the wireless radio, the WiFi LED radio, the WiFi LED lights. turns off. If you enabled the wireless Set Up a WiFi Schedule You can use this feature to turn off the wireless signal from your router at times when you do not need a wireless connection. For example, you might turn it off for the weekend if you leave town. To set up the wireless schedule:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Wireless Settings. The Advanced Wireless Settings screen displays. Specify Network Settings 69 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 5. Click the Add a new period button. 6. Use the lists, radio buttons, and check boxes to set up a period during which you want to turn off the wireless signal. 7. Click the Apply button. The Advanced Wireless Settings screen displays. 8. Select the Turn off wireless signal by schedule check box to activate the schedule. 9. Click the Apply button Your settings are saved. Specify WPS Settings Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) lets you join the WiFi network without typing the WiFi password. To specify WPS settings:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Wireless Settings. The Routers PIN field displays the PIN that you use on a registrar (for example, from the Network Explorer on a Vista Windows computer) to configure the routers wireless settings through WPS. Specify Network Settings 70 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 5. (Optional) Select or clear the Enable Routers PIN check box. The PIN function might temporarily be disabled when the router detects suspicious attempts to break into the routers wireless settings by using the routers PIN through WPS. You can manually enable the PIN function by selecting the Enable Routers PIN check box. 6. (Optional) Select or clear the Keep Existing Wireless Settings check box. By default, the Keep Existing Wireless Settings check box is selected. NETGEAR recommends that you leave this check box selected. If you clear this check box, the next time a new wireless client uses WPS to connect to the router, the router wireless settings change to an automatically generated random SSID and security key. 7. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved. Dynamic DNS If your Internet provider gave you a permanently assigned IP address, you can register a domain name and have that name linked with your IP address by public Domain Name Servers (DNS). However, if your Internet account uses a dynamically assigned IP address, you do not know in advance what your IP address is, and the address can change frequently. In this case, you can use a commercial Dynamic DNS service. This type of service lets you register your domain to their IP address and forwards traffic directed at your domain to your frequently changing IP address. If your Internet provider assigns a private WAN IP address (such as 192.168.x.x or 10.x.x.x), the Dynamic DNS service does not work because private addresses are not routed on the Internet. Your router contains a client that can connect to the Dynamic DNS service that DynDNS.org provided. First, visit their website at http://www.dyndns.org and obtain an account and host name that you configure in the router. Then, whenever your Internet provider-assigned IP address changes, your router automatically contacts the Dynamic DNS service provider, logs in to your account, and registers your new IP address. If your host name is hostname, for example, you can reach your router at http://hostname.dyndns.org. To set up Dynamic DNS:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. Specify Network Settings 71 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Dynamic DNS. 5. Register for an account with one of the Dynamic DNS service providers whose URLs display in the Service Provider list. 6. Select the Use a Dynamic DNS Service check box. 7. Select the URL for your Dynamic DNS service provider. 8. For example, if your Dynamic DNS service provider is DynDNS.org, select www.DynDNS.org. In the Host Name field, type the host name (or domain name) that your Dynamic DNS service provider gave you. In the User Name field, type the user name for your Dynamic DNS account. This name is the name that you use to log in to your account, not your host name. 10. In the Password field, type the password (or key) for your Dynamic DNS account. 11. Click the Apply button. 9. Your settings are saved. Specify Network Settings 72 DRAFT 7. Manage Your Network 7 This chapter describes the router settings for administering and maintaining your router and home network. This chapter includes the following sections:
View Router Information Reboot the Router View Logs of Router Activity Monitor Internet Traffic Manage the Router Configuration File Change the admin Password Remote Management Remote Management 73 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router View Router Information To view router status and usage information:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED. The following screen displays. View Internet Port Information To view router Internet port information:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. Manage Your Network 74 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED. The Internet Port pane displays these WAN Internet port settings:
MAC Address. The MAC address of the WAN Internet port. IP Address/Mask. The IP address of the WAN Internet port. Connection. The type of WAN Internet port connection. Default Gateway. The IP address of the default gateway. Domain Name Server. The IP address of the Domain Name Server. View Wireless Settings To view wireless settings:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED. The Wireless Settings pane displays the following information:
Name (SSID). The wireless network name (SSID) that the router uses. Region. The geographic region where the router is being used. It is illegal to use the wireless features of the router in some parts of the world. Channel. The operating channel of the wireless port being used. The default channel is Auto. When Auto is selected, the router finds the best operating channel available. Mode. The wireless communication mode: Up to 54 Mbps, Up to 145 Mbps (default), or Up to 300 Mbps. Wireless AP. Indicates whether the router WiFi radio is on or off. If the wireless radio is turned off, the WiFi LED on the front panel is off. Broadcast Name. Indicates whether the router is broadcasting its SSID. Wi-Fi Protected Setup. Indicates whether Wi-Fi Protected Setup is configured for this network. Manage Your Network 75 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router View Guest Network Settings By default, the guest network is disabled. For information about how to set up a guest network, see Set Up a WiFi Guest Network on page 66. To view guest network settings:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED. The Guest Network pane displays the following information:
Name (SSID). The wireless network name (SSID) that the guest network uses. Wireless AP. Indicates whether the router WiFi radio is on or off. If the wireless radio is turned off, the WiFi LED on the front panel is off. Broadcast Name. Indicates whether the router is broadcasting the guest network SSID. Allow guests to see each other and to access my local network. If this feature is on, anyone who connects to this SSID has access to your local network, not just Internet access. Reboot the Router Rebooting the router disconnects all computers and mobile devices from the routers network. To reboot the router:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. Manage Your Network 76 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED. 5. In the Router Information pane, click the Reboot button. A confirmation message displays. 6. Click the OK button. The router reboots. View Logs of Router Activity The log is a detailed record of the websites you have accessed or attempted to access. Up to 256 entries are stored in the log. Log entries display only when keyword blocking is enabled. No log entries are made for the trusted LAN client. To view and customize logs:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. Manage Your Network 77 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 4. Select ADVANCED > Administration > Logs. The log screen shows the following information:
Description. The action that occurred. Count. The number of occurrences. Last Occurrence. The date and time the log entry was recorded. Target. The name or IP address of the website or news group visited or to which access was attempted. Source. The source IP address of the initiating device for this log entry. 5. To customize the log, scroll down and clear or select the check boxes:
6. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved. 7. To refresh the log screen, click the Refresh button. 8. To clear the log entries, click the Clear Log button. To send the log immediately, click the Send Log button. Monitor Internet Traffic Traffic metering allows you to monitor the volume of Internet traffic that passes through the router Internet port. You can set limits for traffic volume. To monitor Internet traffic:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the network. Manage Your Network 78 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 2. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Traffic Meter. Scroll to view more settings 5. Select the Enable Traffic Meter check box. 6. (Optional) Control the volume of Internet traffic. You can use either the traffic volume control feature or the connection time control feature:
Select the Traffic volume control by radio button and then select one of the following options:
- No Limit. No restriction is applied when the traffic limit is reached.
- Download only. The restriction is applied to incoming traffic only.
- Both Directions. The restriction is applied to both incoming and outgoing traffic. Select the Connection time control radio button and enter the allowed hours in the Monthly limit field. 7. (Optional) If your ISP charges for extra data volume when you make a new connection, enter the extra data volume in MB in the Round up data volume for each connection by field. Manage Your Network 79 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 8. 9. In the Traffic Counter section, set the traffic counter to begin at a specific time and date. If you want the traffic counter to start immediately, click the Restart Counter Now button. In the Traffic Control section, specify whether the router should issue a warning message before the monthly limit of Mbytes or hours is reached. By default, the value is 0 and no warning message is issued. You can select one of the following to occur when the limit is attained:
The Internet LED blinks green or amber. The Internet connection is disconnected and disabled. 10. Click the Apply button. The Internet Traffic Statistics section helps you to monitor the data traffic. 11. To update the Traffic Statistics section, click the Refresh button. 12. To display more information about the data traffic on your router and to change the poll interval, click the Traffic Status button. Manage the Router Configuration File The configuration settings of the router are stored within the router in a configuration file. You can back up (save) this file to your computer, restore it, or reset it to the factory default settings. Back Up Settings To back up the routers configuration settings:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. Manage Your Network 80 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 4. Select ADVANCED > Administration > Backup Settings. 5. Click the Back Up button. 6. When prompted, specify a location on your network. A copy of the current settings is saved in the location you specified. Restore Configuration Settings To restore configuration settings that you backed up:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Administration > Backup Settings. 5. Click the Browse button to find and select the .cfg file. 6. Click the Restore button. The file is uploaded to the router and the router reboots. WARNING:
Do not interrupt the reboot process. Erase the Current Configuration Settings You can erase the current configuration and restore the factory default settings. You might want to do this if you move the router to a different network. (For more information, see Factory Settings on page 106.) Manage Your Network 81 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router To erase the configuration settings:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Administration > Backup Settings. 5. Click the Erase button. 6. Click the Yes button to confirm. The factory default settings are restored. The user name is admin, the password is password, and the LAN IP address is 192.168.1.1. DHCP is enabled. Change the admin Password You can the default password that is used to log in to the router with the user name admin. If you change this password, NETGEAR recommends that you enable password recovery. Password recovery allows you to recover a forgotten password. Note: This password is not the one that you use for WiFi access. The label on your router shows your unique wireless network name (SSID) and password for wireless access. To set the password for the user name admin:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. Manage Your Network 82 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 4. Select ADVANCED > Administration > Set Password. 5. Type the old password. 6. Type the new password in the Set Password field. 7. Type the new password in the Repeat New Password field. 8. To enable password recovery, select the Enable Password Recovery check box. The screen adjusts. a. Select two security questions. b. In the Answer fields, type the answers to the selected questions. 9. Click the Apply button. Your settings are saved. Remote Management The remote management feature lets you access your router over the Internet to view or change its settings. You need to know the routers WAN IP address to use this feature. Note: Be sure to change the password for the user name admin to a secure password. The ideal password contains no dictionary words from any language and contains uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers, and symbols. It can be up to 30 characters. To set up remote management:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. Manage Your Network 83 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Remote Management. 5. Select the Turn Remote Management On check box. 6. In the Allow Remote Access By section, specify the external IP addresses to be allowed to access the routers remote management:
Note: For enhanced security, restrict access to as few external IP addresses as practical Select one of the following:
To allow access from a single IP address on the Internet, select the Only This Computer radio button. Enter the IP address to be allowed access. To allow access from a range of IP addresses on the Internet, select the IP Address Range radio button. Enter a beginning and ending IP address to define the allowed range. To allow access from any IP address on the Internet, select the Everyone radio button. 7. Specify the port number for accessing the web management interface. Normal web browser access uses the standard HTTP service port 80. For greater security, enter a custom port number for the remote web management interface. Choose a number from 1024 to 65535, but do not use the number of any common service port. The default is 8080, which is a common alternate for HTTP. 8. Click the Apply button. Your changes are saved. To use remote access:
1. Launch a web browser on a computer that is not on your home network. 2. Type your routers WAN IP address into your browsers address or location field followed by a colon (:) and the custom port number. Manage Your Network 84 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router For example, if your external address is 134.177.0.123 and you use port number 8080, enter http://134.177.0.123:8080 in your browser. Manage Your Network 85 DRAFT 8. Specify Internet Port Settings 8 You can use port forwarding and port triggering to set up rules for Internet traffic. You need networking knowledge to set up these features. This chapter includes the following sections:
Set Up Port Forwarding to a Local Server Set Up Port Triggering 86 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Set Up Port Forwarding to a Local Server If you have a server in your home network, you can allow certain types of incoming traffic to reach the server. For example, you might want to make a local web server, FTP server, or game server visible and available to the Internet. The router can forward incoming traffic with specific protocols to computers on your local network. You can specify the servers for applications and you can also specify a default DMZ server to which the router forwards all other incoming protocols. To forward specific incoming protocols:
1. Decide which type of service, application, or game you want to provide. 2. Find the local IP address of the computer on your network that will provide the service. The server computer must always have the same IP address. To specify this setting, use the reserved IP address feature. See Reserve LAN IP Addresses on page 59. 3. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the network. 4. Type www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 5. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 6. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Port Forwarding/Port Triggering. 7. Leave the Port Forwarding radio button selected as the service type. 8. In the Service Name list, select the service name. If the service that you want to add is not in the list, create a custom service. See Add a Custom Port Forwarding Service on page In the Server IP Address field, enter the IP address of the computer that will provide the service. 88. 9. 10. Click the Add button. Specify Internet Port Settings 87 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router The service displays in the list. Add a Custom Port Forwarding Service To add a custom service:
1. Find out which port number or range of numbers the application uses. You can usually find this information by contacting the publisher of the application or user groups or news groups. 2. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the network. 3. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 4. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 5. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Port Forwarding/Port Triggering. 6. Leave the Port Forwarding radio button selected as the service type. 7. Click the Add Custom Service button. In the Service Name field, enter a descriptive name. In the Service Type field, select the protocol. If you are unsure, select TCP/UDP. 8. 9. 10. In the External Starting Port field, enter the beginning port number. If the application uses a single port, enter the same port number in the Ending Port field. If the application uses a range of ports, enter the ending port number of the range in the External Ending Port field. 11. Use one of the following methods to specify the internal port numbers:
Leave Use the same port range for internal port check box selected. Specify Internet Port Settings 88 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Type the port numbers in the Internal Starting Port and Internal Ending Port fields. 12. Type the IP address in the Internal IP address field or select the radio button for an attached device listed in the table. 13. Click the Apply button. The service is now in the list on the Port Forwarding/Port Triggering screen. Edit a Port Forwarding Service To edit a port forwarding entry:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Port Forwarding/Port Triggering. 5. Leave the Port Forwarding radio button selected as the service type. 6. 7. Click the Edit Service button. In the table, select the radio button next to the service name. The Ports - Custom Services screen displays. 8. Specify changes as needed. 9. Click the Apply button. Your changes are saved. Delete a Port Forwarding Entry To delete a port forwarding entry:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. Specify Internet Port Settings 89 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Port Forwarding/Port Triggering. 5. Select the Port Forwarding radio button as the service type. 6. In the table, select the radio button next to the service name. 7. Click the Delete Service button. Application Example: Make a Local Web Server Public If you host a web server on your local network, you can use port forwarding to allow web requests from anyone on the Internet to reach your web server. To make a local web server public:
1. Assign your web server either a fixed IP address or a dynamic IP address using DHCP address reservation. In this example, your router always gives your web server an IP address of 192.168.0.33. In the Port Forwarding/Port Triggering screen, configure the router to forward the HTTP service to the local address of your web server at 192.168.0.33. HTTP (port 80) is the standard protocol for web servers. 2. 3. (Optional) Register a host name with a Dynamic DNS service, and specify that name in the Dynamic DNS screen of the router. For more information, see Dynamic DNS on page Dynamic DNS makes it much easier to access a server from the Internet because you can type the name in the Internet browser. Otherwise, you must know the IP address that the Internet provider assigned, which typically changes. 71. How the Router Implements the Port Forwarding Rule The following sequence shows the effects of a port forwarding rule:
1. When you type the URL www.example.com in your browser, the browser sends a web page request message with the following destination information:
Destination address. The IP address of www.example.com, which is the address of your router. Destination port number. 80, which is the standard port number for a web server process. 2. Your router receives the message and finds your port forwarding rule for incoming port 80 traffic. 3. The router changes the destination in the message to IP address 192.168.1.123 and sends the message to that computer. 4. Your web server at IP address 192.168.1.123 receives the request and sends a reply message to your router. Specify Internet Port Settings 90 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 5. Your router performs Network Address Translation (NAT) on the source IP address, and sends the reply through the Internet to the computer or wireless device that sent the web page request. Set Up Port Triggering Port triggering is a dynamic extension of port forwarding that is useful in these cases:
An application uses port forwarding to more than one local computer (but not simultaneously). An application opens incoming ports that are different from the outgoing port. With port triggering, the router monitors traffic to the Internet from an outbound trigger port that you specify. For outbound traffic from that port, the router saves the IP address of the computer that sent the traffic. The router temporarily opens the incoming port or ports that you specify in your rule, and forwards that incoming traffic to that destination. Port forwarding creates a static mapping of a port number or range of ports to a single local computer. Port triggering can dynamically open ports to any computer when needed and close the ports when they are no longer needed. Note: If you enabled port triggering because you use applications such as multiplayer gaming, peer-to-peer connections, real-time communications such as instant messaging, or remote assistance (a feature in Windows XP), enable Universal Plug and Play (UPnP). See Improve Network Connections with Universal Plug and Play on page 41. Add a Port Triggering Service To add a port triggering service:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Port Forwarding/Port Triggering. Specify Internet Port Settings 91 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 5. Select the Port Triggering radio button. 6. Click the Add Service button. In the Service Name field, type a descriptive service name. 7. 8. From the Service User list, select a user option:
Any (the default) allows any computer on the Internet to use this service. Single address restricts the service to a particular computer. You must enter the IP address of the computer to which you want to grant access. 9. From the Service Type list, select a service. If you are not sure, select TCP/UDP. 10. In the Triggering Port field, enter the number of the outbound traffic port that will open the inbound ports. 11. In the Connection Type, Starting Port, and Ending Port fields, enter the inbound connection port information. 12. Click the Apply button. The service is added. You must enable port triggering before the router uses port triggering. Specify Internet Port Settings 92 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Application Example: Port Triggering for Internet Relay Chat Some application servers, such as FTP and IRC servers, send replies to multiple port numbers. Using port triggering, you can tell the router to open more incoming ports when a particular outgoing port starts a session. An example is Internet Relay Chat (IRC). Your computer connects to an IRC server at destination port 6667. The IRC server not only responds to your originating source port, but also sends an identify message to your computer on port 113. Using port triggering, you can tell the router, When you initiate a session with destination port 6667, you must also allow incoming traffic on port 113 to reach the originating computer. The following sequence shows the effects of this port triggering rule:
1. You open an IRC client program to start a chat session on your computer. 2. Your IRC client composes a request message to an IRC server using a destination port number of 6667, the standard port number for an IRC server process. Your computer then sends this request message to your router. 3. Your router creates an entry in its internal session table describing this communication session between your computer and the IRC server. Your router stores the original information, performs Network Address Translation (NAT) on the source address and port, and sends this request message through the Internet to the IRC server. 4. Noting your port triggering rule and observing the destination port number of 6667, your router creates another session entry to send any incoming port 113 traffic to your computer. 5. The IRC server sends a return message to your router using the NAT-assigned source port
(for example, port 33333) as the destination port and sends an identify message to your router with destination port 113. 6. When your router receives the incoming message to destination port 33333, it checks its session table to see if a session is active for port number 33333. Finding an active session, the router restores the original address information replaced by NAT and sends this reply message to your computer. 7. When your router receives the incoming message to destination port 113, it checks its session table and finds an active session for port 113 associated with your computer. The router replaces the messages destination IP address with your computers IP address and forwards the message to your computer. 8. When you finish your chat session, your router eventually senses a period of inactivity in the communications and removes the session information from its session table, and incoming traffic is no longer accepted on port numbers 33333 or 113. Specify Internet Port Settings 93 DRAFT 9. Troubleshooting 9 This chapter provides information to help you diagnose and solve problems you might have with your router. If you do not find the solution here, visit the NETGEAR support site at http://support.netgear.com for product and contact information. This chapter contains the following sections:
Forgotten Passwords WiFi Connections Changes Not Saved Troubleshoot with the LEDs Cannot Log In to the Router Troubleshoot IP Addresses The Router Cannot Access the Internet Troubleshoot Your Network Using the Ping Utility 94 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Forgotten Passwords The router user name admin lets you use a web browser to log in to the router to view or change its settings. The routers WiFi network name lets you connect to its WiFi network. Both admin and the WiFi network have passwords by default, which are on the product label. admin Password The default password for the router user name admin is password. If you changed it and enabled password recovery, you can recover the password. If you changed the password and did not enable password recovery, you can use the Reset button to return the router to its factory settings. This erases all the routers current settings including its Internet connection settings. For more information, see Factory Settings on page 76. To recover your password when password recovery is enabled:
2. 1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the network. In the address field of your browser, type www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Click the Cancel button. If password recovery is enabled, you are prompted to enter the serial number of the router. The serial number is on the product label. 4. Enter the serial number of the router. 5. Click the Continue button. A screen displays requesting the answers to your security questions. 6. Enter the saved answers to your security questions. 7. Click the Continue button. A screen displays your recovered password. 8. Click the Login again button. A login screen displays. 9. With your recovered password, log in to the router. WiFi Passwords The router comes preset with a unique WiFi network name and WiFi password. This information is on the product label. You can also set up a guest network to allow visitors to access your Internet connection. Troubleshooting 95 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router If you changed the WiFi settings and do not remember what they are, you can use a wired Ethernet connection to log in to the router to view the WiFi settings. To use a wired connection to view WiFi settings:
1. Use an Ethernet cable to connect your computer to a numbered Ethernet LAN port on the router. Ethernet LAN ports Internet port Do not connect this Ethernet cable to the yellow Internet port on the router. 2. Launch a web browser from the connected computer. 3. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 4. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 5. To view the WiFi settings, select Wireless. The Wireless Network screen displays. 6. To view guest network settings, select Guest. The Guest Network Settings screen displays. WiFi Connections If you are having trouble connecting wirelessly to the router, try to isolate the problem. Troubleshooting 96 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router The WiFi signal strength is weak. Check these conditions:
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Is your router too far from your computer, or too close? Move your computer near the router, but at least six feet (two meters) away, and see if the signal strength improves. Is your WiFi signal blocked by objects between the router and your computer?
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Your computer or wireless devices does not find your WiFi network. Check the following:
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Is the WiFi LED If this LED is off, someone might have disabled the wireless radio or set up a wireless schedule. For more information about these settings, see Control the Wireless Radio on page on the router lit?
68.
- Did you disable the routers SSID broadcast?
If you cleared the Enable SSID Broadcast check box in the Wireless Network screen, your wireless network is hidden and does not display in your wireless clients scanning list. To connect to a hidden network, you must type the network name and the WiFi password. For more information about the SSID broadcast, see Specify Basic WiFi Settings on page 61.
- Does your computer or wireless device support the security that you are using for your WiFi network (WEP, WPA, or WPA2)?
For information about wireless security settings, see Specify Basic WiFi Settings on page 61. Changes Not Saved If the router does not save the changes you make through the NETGEAR genie screens, check the following:
When you log in to the router and change the settings on a screen, always click the Apply button before you move to another screen or tab, or your changes are lost. Click the Refresh or Reload button in the web browser. The changes might have occurred, but the old settings might be in the web browsers cache. Troubleshooting 97 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Troubleshoot with the LEDs The LEDs on the front panel of the router indicate its status. Apply Power to the Router and Check the LEDs To apply power to the router and check the LEDs:
1. Connect the power adapter cord that came with the router and plug it in to a power outlet. The Power LED lights and turns amber within a few seconds. This indicates that the self-test is running. 2. After approximately 30 seconds, verify that the LEDS are lit as follows:
The Power LED The WiFi LED The Internet LED If the LEDs do not light as expected, use the LED behavior to troubleshoot the problem. is lit solid green. is lit solid green. is lit solid green. 3. All LEDs Remain Lit When the router is turned on, the LEDs light for about 10 seconds and then turn off. If all the LEDs stay lit, a fault exists within the router. If all LEDs are still lit one minute after power-up, try the following:
Unplug the routers power adapter cord. Plug it in again and see if the router recovers. To return the router to its factory settings, press and hold the Reset button. For more information, see Factory Settings on page 76. If the error persists, you might have a hardware problem. Contact technical support at www.netgear.com/support. Power LED Is Off or Blinking If the Power LED Make sure that the power adapter cord is securely connected to your router and securely is Off or blinking, try the following:
connected to a functioning power outlet. Make sure that you are using the power adapter cord that NETGEAR supplied for this product. If the Power LED blinks slowly and continuously, the router firmware is corrupted. This can happen if a firmware upgrade is interrupted, or if the router detects a problem with the firmware. If the error persists, you have a hardware problem. For recovery instructions or help with a hardware problem, contact technical support at www.netgear.com/support. Troubleshooting 98 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Power LED Stays Amber When the router is turned on, the Power LED then turns green. If the LED does not turn green, the router has a problem. If the Power LED is still amber one minute after you turn on power to the router, try the following:
Unplug the routers power adapter cord. Plug it in again and see if the router recovers. To return the router to its factory settings, press and hold the Reset button. For more information, see Factory Settings on page turns amber for about 20 seconds and 76. If the error persists, you might have a hardware problem. Contact technical support at www.netgear.com/support. Internet LEDs Is Off If the Internet LED Make sure that the Ethernet cable is securely connected to the router Internet port and does not light, check the following:
the modem. Make sure that power is turned on to the connected modem. Be sure that you are using the correct cable. When you connect the routers Internet port to a cable or DSL broadband modem, use the cable that was supplied with the cable or DSL broadband modem. This cable can be a standard straight-through Ethernet cable or an Ethernet crossover cable. WiFi LED Is Off If the WiFi LED wireless schedule. For more information about these settings, see Control the Wireless Radio on page 68. The WiFi LED is lit when the wireless radio is turned on. stays off, check to see if someone disabled the wireless radio or set up a Cannot Log In to the Router If you cannot log in to the router from a computer or wireless device on your local network, check the following:
1. Make sure that your computer or wireless device is connected to the routers network.
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For a WiFi connection, select the network and entered its WiFi password. For a wired connection, use an Ethernet cable to connect your computer to an Ethernet LAN port on the router (not the Ethernet Internet port). 2. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the network. 3. In the address field of your browser, type www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. 4. If a login prompt does not display, try the following:
Troubleshooting 99 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router a. Close the browser and launch it again. b. Make sure that your browser has Java, JavaScript, or ActiveX enabled. If you are using Internet Explorer, click the Refresh button to be sure that the Java applet is loaded. c. If you are using a wired connection, check the Ethernet connection between the computer and the router. 5. If the login prompt displays, but you cannot log in, try the following:
a. Make sure that you are using the correct login information. The user name is admin and the default password is password. Make sure that Caps Lock is off when you enter this information. b. If you customized the IP address scheme that the router uses, see Troubleshoot IP Addresses on page 104. The Router Cannot Access the Internet If you can log in to your router, but it cannot access the Internet, see if the router can obtain an IP address from your Internet service provider (ISP). Unless your Internet provider assigned you a fixed IP address, your router requests an IP address from the Internet service. You can see if the request was successful using the Router Status screen. Note: The Setup Wizard can detect your Internet connection during installation, but if the router cannot get a WAN IP address, the Setup Wizard cannot automatically resolve this issue. If you are attempting to set up your NETGEAR router as a replacement for an ADSL gateway in your network, the router cannot perform many gateway services. For example, the router cannot convert ADSL or cable data into Ethernet networking information. NETGEAR does not support such a configuration. To check the WAN IP address:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Click the ADVANCED tab. Troubleshooting 100 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router 5. 6. The Router Status screen displays. In the Internet Port pane, check that an IP address is shown for the Internet port. If 0.0.0.0 is shown, your router has not obtained an IP address from your ISP. For more information about the Internet Port pane, see Internet Port Pane on page If your router cannot obtain an IP address from the ISP, try to force your cable or DSL broadband modem to recognize your new router by restarting your network in this order:
a. Unplug and turn off the cable or DSL broadband modem. b. Unplug the router. c. Plug in the cable or DSL broadband modem and turn it on. d. Wait two minutes. e. Plug in the router and wait two minutes. 77. If your router is still unable to obtain an IP address from the ISP, the problem might be one of the following:
Your Internet service provider (ISP) might require a login program. Ask your ISP if it requires PPP over Ethernet (PPPoE) or some other type of login. If your ISP requires a login, the login name and password might be set incorrectly. Your ISP might check for your computers host name. Assign the computer host name of your ISP account as the account name in the Internet Setup screen. Your ISP allows only one Ethernet MAC address to connect to Internet and might check for your computers MAC address. In this case, do one of the following:
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Inform your ISP that you have bought a new network device, and ask them to use the routers MAC address.
- Configure your router to clone your computers MAC address. Troubleshoot Internet Browsing If your router can obtain an IP address, but your computer is unable to load any web pages from the Internet, it might be for the following reasons:
Your computer might not recognize any DNS server addresses. A DNS server is a host on the Internet that translates Internet names (such as www addresses) to numeric IP addresses. Typically, your ISP provides the addresses of one or two DNS servers for your use. If you entered a DNS address during the routers configuration, reboot your computer, and verify the DNS address. You can configure your computer manually with DNS addresses, as explained in your operating system documentation. Your computer might not have the router configured as its TCP/IP gateway. If your computer obtains its information from the router by DHCP, reboot the computer, and verify the gateway address. Troubleshooting 101 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router You might be running login software that is no longer needed. If your ISP provided a program to log you in to the Internet (such as WinPoET), you no longer need to run that software after installing your router. If you use Internet Explorer as your browser, you might need to select Tools > Internet Options, click the Connections tab, and select the Never dial a connection check box. Other browsers have similar options. Troubleshoot a PPPoE Internet Connection To troubleshoot a PPPoE Internet connection:
1. Launch a web browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the 2. network. In the address field of the web browser, enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com. A login screen displays. 3. Enter the router user name and password. The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. The BASIC Home screen displays. 4. Click the ADVANCED tab. The Router Status screen displays. 5. On the Internet Port pane, click the Connection Status button. For more information, see Connection Status on page information, including valid IP addresses, your PPPoE connection is up and working. If any of the fields show incomplete information, or no valid IP address, you can attempt to reconnect by clicking the Connect button. The router continues to attempt to connect indefinitely. 79. If the fields show valid If you cannot connect after several minutes, you might be using an incorrect service name, user name, or password. There might also be a provisioning problem with your ISP. Note: Unless you connect manually, the router does not authenticate using PPPoE until data is transmitted to the network. Troubleshoot Your Network Using the Ping Utility Most network devices and routers contain a ping utility that sends an echo request packet to the designated device. The device then responds with an echo reply. You can troubleshoot a network by using the ping utility on your computer or workstation. Troubleshooting 102 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Test the LAN Path to Your Router You can ping the router from your computer to verify that the LAN path to your router is set up correctly. To ping the router from a computer running Windows:
1. From the Windows toolbar, click the Start button and select Run. 2. In the field provided, type ping followed by the IP address of the router, as in this example:
ping www.routerlogin.net 3. Click the OK button. You should see a message like this one:
Pinging <IP address > with 32 bytes of data If the path is working, you see this message:
Reply from < IP address >: bytes=32 time=NN ms TTL=xxx If the path is not working, you see this message:
Request timed out If the path is not functioning correctly, you might have one of the following problems:
Wrong physical connections Check that the appropriate LEDs are on for your network devices. If your router and computer are connected to a separate Ethernet switch, make sure that the link LEDs are lit for the switch ports that are connected to your computer and router. Wrong network configuration Verify that the Ethernet card driver software and TCP/IP software are both installed and configured on your computer. Verify that the IP address for your router and your computer are correct and that the addresses are on the same subnet. Test the Path from Your Computer to a Remote Device After verifying that the LAN path works correctly, test the path from your computer to a remote device. 1. From the Windows toolbar, click the Start button and select Run. 2. In the field provided, type:
ping -n 10 <IP address>
where <IP address> is the IP address of a remote device such as your ISP DNS server. If the path is functioning correctly, replies like those examples shown in Test the LAN Path to Your Router on page 103 are displayed. Troubleshooting 103 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router If you do not receive replies, try the following:
Check that your computer has the IP address of your router listed as the default gateway. If a DHCP server assigns the IP configuration of your computer, this information is not visible on your computers Network Control Panel. Verify that the IP address of the router is listed as the default gateway. Check to see that the network address of your computer (the portion of the IP address specified by the subnet mask) is different from the network address of the remote device. Check that your cable or DSL broadband modem is connected and functioning. If your ISP assigned a host name to your computer, enter that host name as the account name in the Internet Settings screen. Your ISP might be rejecting the Ethernet MAC addresses of all but one of your computers. Many broadband ISPs restrict access by allowing traffic only from the MAC address of your broadband modem, but some ISPs additionally restrict access to the MAC address of a single computer connected to that modem. If this is the case, configure your router to clone or spoof the MAC address from the authorized computer. Troubleshoot IP Addresses By default, the router is set up to automatically assign IP addresses to network clients. The routers IP address is 192.168.1.1 unless you changed it. Wired and wirelessly connected computers must have network IP addresses on the same network as the router. The simplest way to meet this requirement is to configure each computer to obtain an IP address automatically using DHCP. If you customized the IP address settings of your router and youre having trouble with network connections, check the following:
Make sure that your computers IP address is on the same subnet as the router. If you are using the recommended addressing scheme, your computers address is in the range of 192.168.1.2 to 192.168.1.254. If your computers IP address is shown as 169.254.x.x, recent versions of Windows and Mac OS generate and assign an IP address if the computer cannot reach a DHCP server. These autogenerated addresses are in the range of 169.254.x.x. If your IP address is in this range, check the connection from the computer to the router, and reboot your computer. If your routers IP address was changed and you do not know the current IP address, clear the routers configuration to factory defaults. This sets the routers IP address to 192.168.1.1. This procedure is explained in Factory Settings on page 76. Troubleshooting 104 DRAFT A. Supplemental Information This appendix includes the following sections. Factory Settings Technical Specifications A 105 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Factory Settings You can return the router to its factory default settings. To restore the factory default settings:
1. Locate the round hole in the bottom of the router. The Reset button is inside of this hole. 2. Use a paperclip or sharp object to press and hold the Reset button for at least seven seconds. The router resets and returns to the factory configuration settings shown in the following table Table 3. Router factory default settings Feature Router login User login URL Default Behavior www.routerlogin.net User name (case-sensitive) admin Login password (case-sensitive) password Internet connection WAN MAC address Use default hardware address WAN MTU size Port speed 1500 AutoSensing Supplemental Information 106 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Table 3. Router factory default settings (continued) Feature Local area network (LAN) LAN IP Subnet mask DHCP server DHCP range Time zone Default Behavior 192.168.1.1 255.255.255.0 Enabled 192.168.1.2 to 192.168.1.254 United States is Pacific Time; otherwise, varies by region Time zone adjusted for daylight saving time Disabled Wireless Wireless communication Enabled SSID name Network key (password) Broadcast SSID Transmission speed Country/region RF channel Operating mode Preset. For information, see the product label. Enabled Auto Note: Maximum wireless signal rate derived from IEEE Standard 802.11 specifications. Actual throughput varies. Network conditions and environmental factors, including volume of network traffic, building materials and construction, and network overhead lower actual data throughput rate. United States in the US; otherwise, varies by region Auto Up to 300 Mbps 20/40 MHz coexistence Enabled Data rate Output power Best Full Supplemental Information 107 DRAFT N300 Wireless Router Technical Specifications Table 4. Router specifications Feature Description Data and routing protocols TCP/IP, RIP-1, RIP-2, DHCP, PPPoE, PPTP, Bigpond, Dynamic DNS, UPnP, and SMB Power adapter Dimensions Weight North America: 120V, 60 Hz, input UK, Australia: 240V, 50 Hz, input Europe: 230V, 50 Hz, input All regions (output): 12 VDC @ 1A, output 48 mm x 132.5 mm x 108 mm (1.89 in x 5.22 in x 4.28 in) 163 g (5.75 oz) Operating temperature 0 to 40C (32 to 104F) Operating humidity 90% maximum relative humidity, noncondensing Electromagnetic emissions LAN WAN Wireless FCC Part 15 Class B VCCI Class B EN 55 022 (CISPR 22), Class B C-Tick N10947 10BASE-T or 100BASE-Tx, RJ-45 10BASE-T or 100BASE-Tx, RJ-45 Maximum wireless signal rate complies with the IEEE 802.11 standard. See the entry for Transmission speed in Table 3 on page 106. Radio data rates Auto Rate Sensing Data encoding standards IEEE 802.11n version 2.0 IEEE 802.11n, IEEE 802.11g, IEEE 802.11b 2.4 GHz Maximum computers per wireless network Limited by the amount of wireless network traffic generated by each node
(typically 5070 nodes) Operating frequency range 2.4122.462 GHz (US) 2.4122.472 GHz (Japan) 2.4122.472 GHz (Europe ETSI) 802.11 security WEP, WPA-PSK, WPA2-PSK, WPA-PSK + WPA2-PSK mixed mode, WPA/WPA2 Enterprise Supplemental Information 108 DRAFT
1 | Internal Photos | Internal Photos | 788.80 KiB | July 16 2014 |
Page 4 Page 5 Page 6 Page 7 Page 8 Page 9
1 | External Photos | External Photos | 547.16 KiB | July 16 2014 |
CONSTRUCTION PHOTOS OF EUT Page 1 Page 2 Page 3 Page 10 Page 11 Page 12
1 | Label and Location | ID Label/Location Info | 397.25 KiB | July 16 2014 |
01 INITIAL DOCUMENT CREATION R HU 19FEB14 N300 WiFi Router WNR2000 v5 ROUTER LOGIN http://www.routerlogin.net user name: admin password: password i s h t
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s n o i t i d n o c o w t i g n w o y n a t p e c c a t s u m e c v e d i l l o f e h t o t t c e b u s s j i s e i l p m o c i e c v e d i s h T 12V 0.5A R-NZ On O FCC ID: PY314100256 IC: 4054A-14100256 Made in China Designed by NETGEAR in California Graphics Pantone877C R HU 1 of 1 SILKSCREEN,WNR2500V5,TOP SSD-10910-01 01
1 | Attestation (Channel and Mode Declaration) | Attestation Statements | 219.67 KiB | July 16 2014 |
Netgear Incorporated 350 East Plumeria Drive San Jose California United States 95134 TEL: 408-890-3160 FAX: 408-907-8097 May 27, 2014 We, Netgear INC.declare that the device does not support channel 12 ~ 13 in 2.4GHz band and any non-
US channels in all the operational mode(s) for the following product. FCC ID: PY314200271 If you should have any question(s) regarding this declaration, please dont hesitate to contact us. Thank you!
-----------------------------------
Name: David Kay / Title: Director of Product Design Netgear INC. Tel: 408-890-3160 Fax: 408-907-8097 E-mail: David.kay@netgear.com
1 | Confidentiality Request (Long term) | Cover Letter(s) | 78.90 KiB | July 16 2014 |
Netgear Incorporated 350 East Plumeria Drive San Jose California United States 95134 TEL: 408-890-3160 FAX: 408-907-8097 Date: 2014-05-27 FCC ID: PY314200271 To the attention of Federal Communications Commission Authorization and Evaluation Division Confidentiality Request Pursuant to Sections 0.457 and 0.459 of the Commissions Rules, the Applicant hereby requests confidential treatment of information accompanying this Application as outlined below:
Schematics Block Diagram The above materials contain trade secrets and proprietary information not customarily released to the public. The public disclosure of these matters might be harmful to the Applicant and provide unjustified benefits to its competitors. The Applicant understands that pursuant to Rule 0.457, disclosure of this Application and all accompanying documentation will not be made before the date of the Grant for this application. Sincerely yours,
-----------------------------------
Name: David Kay, Signed for John Ramones / Title: Director of Product Design Netgear INC. Tel: 408-890-3160 Fax: 408-907-8097 E-mail: jramones@netgear.com
1 | Cover Letter (Agent Authorization) | Cover Letter(s) | 93.75 KiB | July 16 2014 |
Netgear Incorporated 350 East Plumeria Driver San Jose CaliforniaUnited States 95134 TEL: 408-890-3160 FAX: 408-907-8097 Date: 2014-05-28 FCC ID: PY314200271 A U T H O R I Z A T I O N L E T T E R To whom it may concern:
We, the undersigned Netgear INC. hereby authorize Bureau Veritas Consumer Products Services (H.K.) Ltd., Taoyuan Branch (BV CPS Taoyuan) of Taiwan to act on our behalf in all matters relating to all processes required in FCC Part 15C / Canada and any communication needed with the national authority. Any and all acts carried out by BV CPS Taoyuan on our behalf shall have the same effects as acts of our own. If you have any questions regarding the authorization, please dont hesitate to contact us. Thank you!
Sincerely yours,
-----------------------------------
Name: David Kay, Signed for John Ramones / Title: Director of Product Design Netgear INC. Tel: 408-890-3160 Fax: 408-907-8097 E-mail: jramones@netgear.com
1 | Operational Description | Operational Description | 38.58 KiB | July 16 2014 |
FCC ID: PY314100256 Operational Description This device is a N300 WiFi Router, which operates in 2.4GHz band; the maximum data rate could be up to 300Mbps which OFDM technique. If the signal to noise radio is too poor which could not support 300Mbps, the 11Mbps data rate with DSSS technique will be applied. The transmitter of the EUT is powered by the 12Vdc from AC adapter. The EUT is used antenna list as below:
The other instruction, please have a look at the users manual. Report No.: RF 140506C12
1 | RF Exposure Info (MPE) | RF Exposure Info | 41.06 KiB | July 16 2014 |
RF EXPOSURE REPORT REPORT NO.: SA140506C12 MODEL NO.: WNR2000v5 FCC ID: PY314100256 RECEIVED: May 02, 2014 TESTED: May 07 ~ May 09, 2014 ISSUED: May 23, 2014 APPLICANT: NETGEAR INC. ADDRESS: 350 East Plumeria Drive San Jose, CA 95134, USA ISSUED BY: Bureau Veritas Consumer Products Services
(H.K.) Ltd., Taoyuan Branch LAB ADDRESS: No. 47, 14th Ling, Chia Pau Vil., Lin Kou Dist., New Taipei City, Taiwan, R.O.C. TEST LOCATION: No. 19, Hwa Ya 2nd Rd, Wen Hwa Tsuen, Kwei Shan Hsiang, Taoyuan Hsien 333, Taiwan, R.O.C. This report should not be used by the client to claim product certification, approval, or endorsement by any government agencies. This report is for your exclusive use. Any copying or replication of this report to or for any other person or entity, or use of our name or trademark, is permitted only with our prior written permission. This report sets forth our findings solely with respect to the test samples identified herein. The results set forth in this report are not indicative or representative of the quality or characteristics of the lot from which a test sample was taken or any similar or identical product unless specifically and expressly noted. Our report includes all of the tests requested by you and the results thereof based upon the information that you provided to us. You have 60 days from date of issuance of this report to notify us of any material error or omission caused by our negligence, provided, however, that such notice shall be in writing and shall specifically address the issue you wish to raise. A failure to raise such issue within the prescribed time shall constitute your unqualified acceptance of the completeness of this report, the tests conducted and the correctness of the report contents. Unless specific mention, the uncertainty of measurement has been explicitly taken into account to declare the compliance or non-compliance to the specification. Report No.: SA140506C12 1 of 6 Report Format Version 5.0.0 TABLE OF CONTENTS RELEASE CONTROL RECORD ................................................................................................................ 3 CERTIFICATION ............................................................................................................................ 4 1. 2. RF EXPOSURE ............................................................................................................................. 5 LIMITS FOR MAXIMUM PERMISSIBLE EXPOSURE (MPE) ....................................................... 5 2.1 MPE CALCULATION FORMULA .................................................................................................. 5 2.2 2.3 CLASSIFICATION.......................................................................................................................... 5 2.4 CALCULATION RESULT OF MAXIMUM CONDUCTED POWER ................................................ 6 Report No.: SA140506C12 2 of 6 Report Format Version 5.0.0 RELEASE CONTROL RECORD ISSUE NO. SA140506C12 REASON FOR CHANGE Original release DATE ISSUED May 23, 2014 Report No.: SA140506C12 3 of 6 Report Format Version 5.0.0 1. CERTIFICATION PRODUCT: N300 WiFi Router MODEL NO.: WNR2000v5 BRAND: NETGEAR APPLICANT: NETGEAR INC. TESTED: May 07 ~ May 09, 2014 TEST SAMPLE: ENGINEERING SAMPLE STANDARDS: FCC Part 2 (Section 2.1091) FCC OET Bulletin 65, Supplement C (01-01) IEEE C95.1 The above equipment (model: WNR2000v5) has been tested by Bureau Veritas Consumer Products Services (H.K.) Ltd., Taoyuan Branch, and found compliance with the requirement of the above standards. The test record, data evaluation &
Equipment Under Test (EUT) configurations represented herein are true and accurate accounts of the measurements of the samples EMC characteristics under the conditions specified in this report. PREPARED BY APPROVED BY
:
:
Jemma Yang / Specialist
, DATE :
May 23, 2014
, DATE :
May 23, 2014 Ken Liu / Senior Manager Report No.: SA140506C12 4 of 6 Report Format Version 5.0.0 2. RF EXPOSURE 2.1 LIMITS FOR MAXIMUM PERMISSIBLE EXPOSURE (MPE) FREQUENCY RANGE (MHz) ELECTRIC FIELD STRENGTH (V/m) MAGNETIC FIELD STRENGTH (A/m) POWER DENSITY
(mW/cm2) AVERAGE TIME
(minutes) LIMITS FOR GENERAL POPULATION / UNCONTROLLED EXPOSURE 300-1500 1500-100,000 F = Frequency in MHz F/1500 1.0 30 30 2.2 MPE CALCULATION FORMULA Pd = (Pout*G) / (4*pi*r2) where Pd = power density in mW/cm2 Pout = output power to antenna in mW G = gain of antenna in linear scale Pi = 3.1416 R = distance between observation point and center of the radiator in cm 2.3 CLASSIFICATION The antenna of this product, under normal use condition, is at least 20cm away from the body of the user. So, this device is classified as Mobile Device. Report No.: SA140506C12 5 of 6 Report Format Version 5.0.0 2.4 CALCULATION RESULT OF MAXIMUM CONDUCTED POWER FREQUENCY BAND MAX POWER
(dBm) ANTENNA GAIN (dBi) DISTANCE
(cm) 2.4GHz 25.01 5.88 20 POWER DENSITY
(mW/cm2) 0.244 LIMIT
(mW/cm2) 1 Note: Directional gain = 2.87dBi + 10log(2) = 5.88dBi
---END---
Report No.: SA140506C12 6 of 6 Report Format Version 5.0.0
1 | Test Report | Test Report | 1.52 MiB | July 16 2014 |
FCC TEST REPORT REPORT NO.: RF140506C12 MODEL NO.: WNR2000v5 FCC ID: PY314100256 RECEIVED: May 02, 2014 TESTED: May 07 ~ May 09, 2014 ISSUED: May 23, 2014 APPLICANT: NETGEAR INC. ADDRESS: 350 East Plumeria Drive San Jose, CA 95134, USA ISSUED BY: Bureau Veritas Consumer Products Services
(H.K.) Ltd., Taoyuan Branch LAB ADDRESS: No. 47, 14th Ling, Chia Pau Vil., Lin Kou Dist., New Taipei City, Taiwan, R.O.C. TEST LOCATION: No. 19, Hwa Ya 2nd Rd, Wen Hwa Tsuen, Kwei Shan Hsiang, Taoyuan Hsien 333, Taiwan, R.O.C. This report should not be used by the client to claim product certification, approval, or endorsement by TAF or any government agencies. This report is for your exclusive use. Any copying or replication of this report to or for any other person or entity, or use of our name or trademark, is permitted only with our prior written permission. This report sets forth our findings solely with respect to the test samples identified herein. The results set forth in this report are not indicative or representative of the quality or characteristics of the lot from which a test sample was taken or any similar or identical product unless specifically and expressly noted. Our report includes all of the tests requested by you and the results thereof based upon the information that you provided to us. You have 60 days from date of issuance of this report to notify us of any material error or omission caused by our negligence, provided, however, that such notice shall be in writing and shall specifically address the issue you wish to raise. A failure to raise such issue within the prescribed time shall constitute your unqualified acceptance of the completeness of this report, the tests conducted and the correctness of the report contents. Unless specific mention, the uncertainty of measurement has been explicitly taken into account to declare the compliance or non-compliance to the specification. Report No.: RF140506C12 1 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 TABLE OF CONTENTS RELEASE CONTROL RECORD ................................................................................................................ 4 CERTIFICATION ............................................................................................................................ 5 1. 2. SUMMARY OF TEST RESULTS ................................................................................................... 6 MEASUREMENT UNCERTAINTY ................................................................................................ 6 2.1 GENERAL INFORMATION ............................................................................................................ 7 3. 3.1 GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF EUT .............................................................................................. 7 3.2 DESCRIPTION OF TEST MODES ................................................................................................ 9 3.2.1 TEST MODE APPLICABILITY AND TESTED CHANNEL DETAIL .............................................. 10 DUTY CYCLE OF TEST SIGNAL ................................................................................................ 12 3.3 3.4 DESCRIPTION OF SUPPORT UNITS ........................................................................................ 13 3.4.1 CONFIGURATION OF SYSTEM UNDER TEST ......................................................................... 13 GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF APPLIED STANDARDS ............................................................. 14 3.5 4. TEST TYPES AND RESULTS ..................................................................................................... 15 4.1 RADIATED EMISSION AND BANDEDGE MEASUREMENT ..................................................... 15 4.1.1 LIMITS OF RADIATED EMISSION AND BANDEDGE MEASUREMENT ................................... 15 4.1.2 TEST INSTRUMENTS ................................................................................................................. 16 4.1.3 TEST PROCEDURES ................................................................................................................. 17 4.1.4 DEVIATION FROM TEST STANDARD ....................................................................................... 17 4.1.5 TEST SETUP ............................................................................................................................... 18 4.1.6 EUT OPERATING CONDITIONS ................................................................................................ 19 4.1.7 TEST RESULTS .......................................................................................................................... 20 4.2 CONDUCTED EMISSION MEASUREMENT .............................................................................. 34 4.2.1 LIMITS OF CONDUCTED EMISSION MEASUREMENT ........................................................... 34 4.2.2 TEST INSTRUMENTS ................................................................................................................. 34 4.2.3 TEST PROCEDURES ................................................................................................................. 35 4.2.4 DEVIATION FROM TEST STANDARD ....................................................................................... 35 4.2.5 TEST SETUP ............................................................................................................................... 35 4.2.6 EUT OPERATING CONDITIONS ................................................................................................ 35 4.2.7 TEST RESULTS .......................................................................................................................... 36 4.3 6dB BANDWIDTH MEASUREMENT .......................................................................................... 40 4.3.1 LIMITS OF 6dB BANDWIDTH MEASUREMENT ........................................................................ 40 4.3.2 TEST SETUP ............................................................................................................................... 40 4.3.3 TEST INSTRUMENTS ................................................................................................................. 40 4.3.4 TEST PROCEDURE .................................................................................................................... 40 4.3.5 DEVIATION FROM TEST STANDARD ....................................................................................... 40 4.3.6 EUT OPERATING CONDITIONS ................................................................................................ 40 4.3.7 TEST RESULTS .......................................................................................................................... 41 4.4 CONDUCTED OUTPUT POWER ............................................................................................... 43 4.4.1 LIMITS OF CONDUCTED OUTPUT POWER MEASUREMENT ............................................... 43 4.4.2 TEST SETUP ............................................................................................................................... 43 4.4.3 TEST INSTRUMENTS ................................................................................................................. 43 4.4.4 TEST PROCEDURES ................................................................................................................. 43 Report No.: RF140506C12 2 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 4.4.5 DEVIATION FROM TEST STANDARD ....................................................................................... 44 4.4.6 EUT OPERATING CONDITIONS ................................................................................................ 44 4.4.7 TEST RESULTS .......................................................................................................................... 45 4.5 POWER SPECTRAL DENSITY MEASUREMENT ...................................................................... 46 4.5.1 LIMITS OF POWER SPECTRAL DENSITY MEASUREMENT ................................................... 46 4.5.2 TEST SETUP ............................................................................................................................... 46 4.5.3 TEST INSTRUMENTS ................................................................................................................. 46 4.5.4 TEST PROCEDURE .................................................................................................................... 46 4.5.5 DEVIATION FROM TEST STANDARD ....................................................................................... 46 4.5.6 EUT OPERATING CONDITION .................................................................................................. 46 4.5.7 TEST RESULTS .......................................................................................................................... 47 4.6 CONDUCTED OUT OF BAND EMISSION MEASUREMENT .................................................... 49 4.6.1 LIMITS OF CONDUCTED OUT OF BAND EMISSION MEASUREMENT .................................. 49 4.6.2 TEST SETUP ............................................................................................................................... 49 4.6.3 TEST INSTRUMENTS ................................................................................................................. 49 4.6.4 TEST PROCEDURE .................................................................................................................... 50 4.6.5 DEVIATION FROM TEST STANDARD ....................................................................................... 50 4.6.6 EUT OPERATING CONDITION .................................................................................................. 50 4.6.7 TEST RESULTS .......................................................................................................................... 50 PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE TEST CONFIGURATION ................................................................. 59 5. INFORMATION ON THE TESTING LABORATORIES ................................................................ 60 6. APPENDIX A MODIFICATIONS RECORDERS FOR ENGINEERING CHANGES TO THE 7. EUT BY THE LAB ........................................................................................................................ 61 Report No.: RF140506C12 3 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 RELEASE CONTROL RECORD ISSUE NO. RF140506C12 REASON FOR CHANGE Original release. DATE ISSUED May 23, 2014 Report No.: RF140506C12 4 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 1. CERTIFICATION PRODUCT: N300 WiFi Router MODEL NO.: WNR2000v5 BRAND: NETGEAR APPLICANT: NETGEAR INC. TESTED: May 07 ~ May 09, 2014 TEST SAMPLE: ENGINEERING SAMPLE STANDARDS: FCC Part 15, Subpart C (Section 15.247) ANSI C63.10-2009 The above equipment (model: WNR2000v5) has been tested by Bureau Veritas Consumer Products Services (H.K.) Ltd., Taoyuan Branch, and found compliance with the requirement of the above standards. The test record, data evaluation &
Equipment Under Test (EUT) configurations represented herein are true and accurate accounts of the measurements of the samples EMC characteristics under the conditions specified in this report. PREPARED BY :
Jemma Yang / Specialist
, DATE :
May 23, 2014 APPROVED BY :
, DATE :
May 23, 2014 Ken Liu / Senior Manager Report No.: RF140506C12 5 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 2. SUMMARY OF TEST RESULTS The EUT has been tested according to the following specifications:
APPLIED STANDARD: FCC PART 15, SUBPART C (SECTION 15.247) STANDARD SECTION TEST TYPE RESULT REMARK 15.207 AC Power Conducted Emission PASS 15.205 & 209 Radiated Emissions 15.247(d) Band Edge Measurement Antenna Port Emission 15.247(d) 15.247(a)(2) 6dB bandwidth 15.247(b) 15.247(e) Conducted power Power Spectral Density 15.203 Antenna Requirement PASS PASS PASS PASS PASS PASS PASS Meet the requirement of limit. Minimum passing margin is
-18.54dB at 4.66016MHz. Meet the requirement of limit. Minimum passing margin is
-0.2dB at 2390.00MHz and 2483.5MHz. Meet the requirement of limit. Minimum passing margin is
-0.2dB at 2483.50MHz. Meet the requirement of limit. Meet the requirement of limit. Meet the requirement of limit. Meet the requirement of limit. Antenna connector is IPEX not a standard connector. 2.1 MEASUREMENT UNCERTAINTY Where relevant, the following measurement uncertainty levels have been estimated for tests performed on the EUT as specified in CISPR 16-4-2:
MEASUREMENT Conducted emissions Radiated emissions FREQUENCY 150kHz~30MHz 30MHz ~ 200MHz 200MHz ~1000MHz 1GHz ~ 18GHz 18GHz ~ 40GHz UNCERTAINTY 2.44 dB 3.19 dB 3.21 dB 2.26 dB 1.94 dB This uncertainty represents an expanded uncertainty expressed at approximately the 95% confidence level using a coverage factor of k = 2. Report No.: RF140506C12 6 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 3. GENERAL INFORMATION 3.1 GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF EUT EUT MODEL NO. POWER SUPPLY MODULATION TYPE N300 WiFi Router WNR2000v5 12Vdc (adapter) CCK, DQPSK, DBPSK for DSSS 64QAM, 16QAM, QPSK, BPSK for OFDM MODULATION TECHNOLOGY DSSS, OFDM TRANSFER RATE OPERATING FREQUENCY NUMBER OF CHANNEL OUTPUT POWER ANTENNA TYPE ANTENNA CONNECTOR DATA CABLE I/O PORTS ACCESSORY DEVICES 802.11b:11.0/ 5.5/ 2.0/ 1.0Mbps 802.11g: 54.0/ 48.0/ 36.0/ 24.0/ 18.0/ 12.0/ 9.0/ 6.0Mbps 802.11n: up to 300.0Mbps 2412 ~ 2462MHz 11 for 802.11b, 802.11g, 802.11n (20MHz) 7 for 802.11n (40MHz) 316.605 mW PIFA antenna with 2.87dBi gain IPEX N/A Refer to users manual Adapter Report No.: RF140506C12 7 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 NOTE:
1. The EUT incorporates a MIMO function. Physically, the EUT provides two completed transmitters and two receivers. MODULATION MODE TX FUNCTION 802.11b 802.11g 802.11n (20MHz) 802.11n (40MHz) 2TX 2TX 2TX 2TX 2. The EUT consumes power from the following adapter. ADAPTER 1 BRAND: NETGEAR MODEL: MU06-N120050-A1 INPUT: 100-240Vac, 50/60Hz, 0.2A OUTPUT: 12Vdc, 0.5A POWER LINE: 1.8m cable attached on adapter without core ADAPTER 2 BRAND: NETGEAR MODEL: AD2015F23 INPUT: 100-240Vac, 50/60Hz, 0.15A OUTPUT: 12Vdc, 0.5A POWER LINE: 1.85m cable attached on adapter without core 3. The above EUT information is declared by manufacturer and for more detailed features description, please refer to the manufacturer's specifications or user's manual. Report No.: RF140506C12 8 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 3.2 DESCRIPTION OF TEST MODES 11 channels are provided for 802.11b, 802.11g and 802.11n (20MHz):
CHANNEL FREQUENCY CHANNEL FREQUENCY 1 2 3 4 5 6 2412MHz 2417MHz 2422MHz 2427MHz 2432MHz 2437MHz 7 8 9 10 11 2442MHz 2447MHz 2452MHz 2457MHz 2462MHz 7 channels are provided for 802.11n (40MHz):
CHANNEL FREQUENCY CHANNEL FREQUENCY 3 4 5 6 2422MHz 2427MHz 2432MHz 2437MHz 7 8 9 2442MHz 2447MHz 2452MHz Report No.: RF140506C12 9 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 3.2.1 TEST MODE APPLICABILITY AND TESTED CHANNEL DETAIL EUT CONFIGURE MODE APPLICABLE TO DESCRIPTION RE1G RE<1G A B
-
PLC APCM
-
Adapter 1 Adapter 2 Where NOTE: The EUT had been pre-tested on the positioned of each 3 axis. The worst case was found when positioned on RE<1G: Radiated Emission below 1GHz APCM: Antenna Port Conducted Measurement RE1G: Radiated Emission above 1GHz PLC: Power Line Conducted Emission Z-plane. RADIATED EMISSION TEST (ABOVE 1GHz):
Pre-Scan has been conducted to determine the worst-case mode from all possible combinations between available modulations, data rates and antenna ports (if EUT with antenna diversity architecture). Following channel(s) was (were) selected for the final test as listed below. EUT CONFIGURE MODE A A A A MODE 802.11b 802.11g 802.11n (20MHz) 802.11n (40MHz) AVAILABLE CHANNEL TESTED CHANNEL MODULATION TECHNOLOGY MODULATION TYPE 1 to 11 1 to 11 1 to 11 3 to 9 1, 6, 11 1, 6, 11 1, 6, 11 3, 6, 9 DSSS OFDM OFDM OFDM DBPSK BPSK BPSK BPSK DATA RATE
(Mbps) 1.0 6.0 7.2 15.0 RADIATED EMISSION TEST (BELOW 1GHz):
Pre-Scan has been conducted to determine the worst-case mode from all possible combinations between available modulations, data rates and antenna ports (if EUT with antenna diversity architecture). Following channel(s) was (were) selected for the final test as listed below. EUT CONFIGURE MODE MODE A, B AVAILABLE CHANNEL TESTED CHANNEL MODULATION TECHNOLOGY 802.11n (20MHz) 1 to 11 6 OFDM MODULATION TYPE BPSK DATA RATE
(Mbps) 7.2 POWER LINE CONDUCTED EMISSION TEST:
Pre-Scan has been conducted to determine the worst-case mode from all possible combinations between available modulations, data rates and antenna ports (if EUT with antenna diversity architecture). Following channel(s) was (were) selected for the final test as listed below. EUT CONFIGURE MODE MODE A, B AVAILABLE CHANNEL TESTED CHANNEL MODULATION TECHNOLOGY 802.11n (20MHz) 1 to 11 6 OFDM MODULATION TYPE BPSK DATA RATE
(Mbps) 7.2 Report No.: RF140506C12 10 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 BANDEDGE MEASUREMENT:
Pre-Scan has been conducted to determine the worst-case mode from all possible combinations between available modulations, data rates and antenna ports (if EUT with antenna diversity architecture). Following channel(s) was (were) selected for the final test as listed below. EUT CONFIGURE MODE A A A A MODE 802.11b 802.11g 802.11n (20MHz) 802.11n (40MHz) AVAILABLE CHANNEL TESTED CHANNEL MODULATION TECHNOLOGY MODULATION TYPE 1 to 11 1 to 11 1 to 11 3 to 9 1, 11 1, 11 1, 11 3, 9 DSSS OFDM OFDM OFDM DBPSK BPSK BPSK BPSK DATA RATE
(Mbps) 1.0 6.0 7.2 15.0 ANTENNA PORT CONDUCTED MEASUREMENT:
This item includes all test value of each mode, but only includes spectrum plot of worst value of each mode. Pre-Scan has been conducted to determine the worst-case mode from all possible combinations between available modulations, data rates and antenna ports (if EUT with antenna diversity architecture). Following channel(s) was (were) selected for the final test as listed below. EUT CONFIGURE MODE A A A A MODE 802.11b 802.11g 802.11n (20MHz) 802.11n (40MHz) AVAILABLE CHANNEL TESTED CHANNEL MODULATION TECHNOLOGY MODULATION TYPE 1 to 11 1 to 11 1 to 11 3 to 9 1, 6, 11 1, 6, 11 1, 6, 11 3, 6, 9 DSSS OFDM OFDM OFDM DBPSK BPSK BPSK BPSK DATA RATE
(Mbps) 1.0 6.0 7.2 15.0 TEST CONDITION:
APPLICABLE TO ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS RE1G RE<1G PLC APCM 25deg. C, 67%RH 25deg. C, 67%RH 25deg. C, 67%RH 25deg. C, 60%RH INPUT POWER 120Vac, 60Hz 120Vac, 60Hz 120Vac, 60Hz 120Vac, 60Hz TESTED BY Alan Wu Alan Wu Alan Wu Edward Lin Report No.: RF140506C12 11 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 3.3 DUTY CYCLE OF TEST SIGNAL 802.11b: Duty cycle of test signal is > 98 %
802.11g, 802.11n (20MHz), 802.11n (40MHz): Duty cycle of test signal is < 98%
802.11g: Duty cycle = 2.025/2.090 = 0.969, Duty factor = 10 * log( 1/0.969) = 0.14 802.11n (20MHz): Duty cycle = 1.880/1.950 = 0.964, Duty factor = 10 * log( 1/0.964) = 0.16 802.11n (40MHz): Duty cycle = 0.915/0.975 = 0.938, Duty factor = 10 * log( 1/0.938) = 0.28 802.11b 802.11g 802.11n (20MHz) 802.11n (40MHz) Report No.: RF140506C12 12 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 3.4 DESCRIPTION OF SUPPORT UNITS The EUT has been tested as an independent unit together with other necessary accessories or support units. The following support units or accessories were used to form a representative test configuration during the tests. NO. 1 PRODUCT Notebook BRAND DELL MODEL NO. E5420 SERIAL NO. 33MKMQ1 FCC ID FCC DoC Approved SIGNAL CABLE DESCRIPTION OF THE ABOVE SUPPORT UNITS NO. 1 10m non-shielded RJ45 cable. NOTE:
1. All power cords of the above support units are non-shielded (1.8m). 2. Item 1 acted as a communication partner to transfer data. 1.8m RJ45 UTP cable x 4 with load EUT 3.4.1 CONFIGURATION OF SYSTEM UNDER TEST
*Kept in a remote area 10m non-shielded RJ45 cable
(Power from adapter) Notebook
*Test table Report No.: RF140506C12 13 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 3.5 GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF APPLIED STANDARDS The EUT is a RF Product. According to the specifications of the manufacturer, it must comply with the requirements of the following standards:
FCC Part 15, Subpart C (15.247) 558074 D01 DTS Meas Guidance v03r02 662911 D01 Multiple Transmitter Output v02r01 ANSI C63.10-2009 All test items have been performed and recorded as per the above standards. NOTE: The EUT is also considered as a kind of computer peripheral, because the connection to computer is necessary for typical use. It has been verified to comply with the requirements of FCC Part 15, Subpart B, Class B (DoC). The test report has been issued separately. Report No.: RF140506C12 14 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 4. TEST TYPES AND RESULTS 4.1 RADIATED EMISSION AND BANDEDGE MEASUREMENT 4.1.1 LIMITS OF RADIATED EMISSION AND BANDEDGE MEASUREMENT Radiated emissions which fall in the restricted bands must comply with the radiated emission limits specified as below table. Other emissions shall be at least 30dB below the highest level of the desired power:
FREQUENCIES
(MHz) FIELD STRENGTH
(microvolts/meter) MEASUREMENT DISTANCE
(meters) 0.009 ~ 0.490 0.490 ~ 1.705 1.705 ~ 30.0 30 ~ 88 88 ~ 216 216 ~ 960 Above 960 2400/F(kHz) 24000/F(kHz) 30 100 150 200 500 300 30 30 3 3 3 3 NOTE:
1. The lower limit shall apply at the transition frequencies. 2. Emission level (dBuV/m) = 20 log Emission level (uV/m). 3. For frequencies above 1000MHz, the field strength limits are based on average detector, however, the peak field strength of any emission shall not exceed the maximum permitted average limits, specified above by more than 30dB under any condition of modulation. Report No.: RF140506C12 15 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 4.1.2 TEST INSTRUMENTS DESCRIPTION &
MANUFACTURER MODEL NO. SERIAL NO. DATE OF CALIBRATION DUE DATE OF CALIBRATION 148 ESCI 8449B Jan. 04, 2015 Oct. 27, 2014 8447D 100424 100115 FSU 43 9168-155 VULB9168 9120D-404 BBHA 9170 2944A10738 3008A01961 Jul. 15, 2013 Jul. 14, 2014 Feb. 25, 2015 Dec. 17, 2014 Sep. 08, 2014 BBHA 9120D Oct. 18, 2013 Oct. 28, 2013 Jan. 05, 2014 Feb. 26, 2014 Sep. 09, 2013 Dec. 18, 2013 SUCOFLEX 104 Test Receiver ROHDE & SCHWARZ Spectrum Analyzer ROHDE & SCHWARZ BILOG Antenna SCHWARZBECK HORN Antenna SCHWARZBECK HORN Antenna SCHWARZBECK Preamplifier Agilent Preamplifier Agilent RF signal cable HUBER+SUHNNER RF signal cable HUBER+SUHNNER RF signal cable HUBER+SUHNNER Software BV ADT Antenna Tower inn-co GmbH Antenna Tower Controller inn-co GmbH Turn Table BV ADT Turn Table Controller BV ADT High Speed Peak Jul. 28, 2014 Power Meter Power Sensor Jul. 28, 2014 NOTE: 1. The calibration interval of the above test instruments is 12 months and the calibrations SUCOFLEX 104 ADT_Radiated_ Jul. 29, 2013 Jul. 29, 2013 V7.6.15.9.4 MA 4000 ML2495A MA2411B 0824011 0738171 SUCOFLEX 104 Aug. 26, 2013 Aug. 26, 2013 Aug. 26, 2013 Aug. 25, 2014 Aug. 25, 2014 Aug. 25, 2014 SC93021704 TT93021704 309220/4 250724/4 295012/4 CO2000 SC100. 019303 010303 TT100. Oct. 17, 2014 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA are traceable to NML/ROC and NIST/USA. 2. The test was performed in HwaYa Chamber 4. 3. The horn antenna and HP preamplifier (model: 8449B) are used only for the measurement of emission frequency above 1GHz if tested. 4. The FCC Site Registration No. is 460141. 5. The IC Site Registration No. is IC7450F-4. Report No.: RF140506C12 16 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 4.1.3 TEST PROCEDURES a. The EUT was placed on the top of a rotating table 0.8 meters above the ground at a 3 meters semi-anechoic chamber. The table was rotated 360 degrees to determine the position of the highest radiation. b. The EUT was set 3 meters away from the interference-receiving antenna, which was mounted on the top of a variable-height antenna tower. c. Height of receiving antenna is varied from one meter to four meters above the ground to determine the maximum value of the field strength. Both horizontal and vertical polarizations of the antenna are set to make the measurement. d. For each suspected emission, the EUT was arranged to its worst case and then the antenna was tuned to heights from 1 meter to 4 meters and the rotatable table was turned from 0 degrees to 360 degrees to find the maximum reading. e. The test-receiver system was set to Peak Detect Function and Specified Bandwidth with Maximum Hold Mode. f. If the emission level of the EUT in peak mode was lower than the limit specified, then testing could be stopped and the peak values of the EUT would be reported. Otherwise the emissions would be re-tested one by one using peak, quasi-peak or average method as specified and then reported in a data sheet. NOTE:
1. The resolution bandwidth and video bandwidth of test receiver/spectrum analyzer is 120kHz for Quasi-peak detection at frequency below 1GHz. 2. The resolution bandwidth of test receiver/spectrum analyzer is 1MHz and video bandwidth is 3MHz for Peak detection at frequency above 1GHz. 3. The resolution bandwidth of test receiver/spectrum analyzer is 1MHz and the video bandwidth is 1/T (Duty cycle < 98%) or 10Hz(Duty cycle > 98%) for Average detection (AV) at frequency above 1GHz. 4. All modes of operation were investigated and the worst-case emissions are reported. 4.1.4 DEVIATION FROM TEST STANDARD No deviation. Report No.: RF140506C12 17 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 4.1.5 TEST SETUP Frequency range 30MHz~1GHz Frequency range above 1GHz For the actual test configuration, please refer to the attached file (Test Setup Photo). Report No.: RF140506C12 18 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 4.1.6 EUT OPERATING CONDITIONS a. Placed the EUT on the testing table. b. Prepared notebooks to act as communication partner and placed it outside of testing area. c. The communication partner connected with EUT via a RJ45 cable and ran a test program (provided by manufacturer) to enable EUT under transmission condition continuously at specific channel frequency. d. The communication partner sent data to EUT by command "PING". e. The necessary accessories enable the system in full functions. Report No.: RF140506C12 19 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 4.1.7 TEST RESULTS EUT TEST CONDITION CHANNEL Channel 1 INPUT POWER 120Vac, 60Hz MEASUREMENT DETAIL FREQUENCY RANGE 1 ~ 25GHz DETECTOR Peak (PK) FUNCTION Average (AV) ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS 25deg. C, 67%RH TESTED BY Alan Wu NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6 2390.00 2390.00
*2412.00
*2412.00 4824.00 4824.00 RAW VALUE LIMIT TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: HORIZONTAL AT 3 M EMISSION ANTENNA HEIGHT (m)
(dBuV)
(dBuV/m) 74.0 54.0
-16.9
-7.9 MARGIN (dB) LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 57.1 PK 25.10 46.1 AV 14.10 107.5 PK 75.50 104.5 AV 72.50 57.8 PK 52.60 53.5 AV 48.30 ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: VERTICAL AT 3 M EMISSION 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.33 H 1.33 H 210 210 210 210 243 243
-16.2
-0.5 74.0 54.0 RAW VALUE MARGIN (dB) ANTENNA HEIGHT (m) TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6 2390.00 2390.00
*2412.00
*2412.00 4824.00 4824.00 REMARKS:
LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 57.6 PK 46.4 AV 109.1 PK 105.7 AV 54.2 PK 47.6 AV LIMIT
(dBuV/m) 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0
-16.4
-7.6
-19.8
-6.4 1.06 V 1.06 V 1.06 V 1.06 V 1.26 V 1.26 V 236 236 236 236 237 237
(dBuV) 25.60 14.40 77.10 73.70 49.00 42.40 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.00 32.00 32.00 32.00 5.20 5.20 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.00 32.00 32.00 32.00 5.20 5.20 1. Emission Level(dBuV/m) = Raw Value(dBuV) + Correction Factor(dB/m) 2. Correction Factor(dB/m) = Antenna Factor(dB/m) + Cable Factor(dB) Pre-Amplifier Factor(dB) 3. The other emission levels were very low against the limit. 4. Margin value = Emission Level Limit value 5. * : Fundamental frequency. Report No.: RF140506C12 20 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 EUT TEST CONDITION CHANNEL Channel 6 INPUT POWER 120Vac, 60Hz MEASUREMENT DETAIL FREQUENCY RANGE 1 ~ 25GHz DETECTOR Peak (PK) FUNCTION Average (AV) ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS 25deg. C, 67%RH TESTED BY Alan Wu NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6
*2437.00
*2437.00 4874.00 4874.00 7311.00 7311.00 RAW VALUE LIMIT TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: HORIZONTAL AT 3 M EMISSION ANTENNA HEIGHT (m)
(dBuV)
(dBuV/m) MARGIN (dB) LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 110.2 PK 78.10 107.0 AV 74.90 57.7 PK 52.40 53.3 AV 48.00 61.3 PK 50.00 53.2 AV 41.90 ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: VERTICAL AT 3 M EMISSION 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.31 H 1.31 H 1.41 H 1.41 H 43 43 243 243 274 274
-16.3
-0.7
-12.7
-0.8 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0 RAW VALUE MARGIN (dB) ANTENNA HEIGHT (m) TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6
*2437.00
*2437.00 4874.00 4874.00 7311.00 7311.00 REMARKS:
LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 111.0 PK 107.2 AV 53.4 PK 48.2 AV 58.0 PK 50.2 AV LIMIT
(dBuV/m) 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0
-20.6
-5.8
-16.0
-3.8 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.25 V 1.25 V 1.22 V 1.22 V 287 287 237 237 253 253
(dBuV) 78.90 75.10 48.10 42.90 46.70 38.90 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.10 32.10 5.30 5.30 11.30 11.30 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.10 32.10 5.30 5.30 11.30 11.30 1. Emission Level(dBuV/m) = Raw Value(dBuV) + Correction Factor(dB/m) 2. Correction Factor(dB/m) = Antenna Factor(dB/m) + Cable Factor(dB) Pre-Amplifier Factor(dB) 3. The other emission levels were very low against the limit. 4. Margin value = Emission Level Limit value 5. * : Fundamental frequency. Report No.: RF140506C12 21 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 EUT TEST CONDITION CHANNEL Channel 11 INPUT POWER 120Vac, 60Hz MEASUREMENT DETAIL FREQUENCY RANGE 1 ~ 25GHz DETECTOR Peak (PK) FUNCTION Average (AV) ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS 25deg. C, 67%RH TESTED BY Alan Wu NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
*2462.00
*2462.00 2483.50 2483.50 4924.00 4924.00 7386.00 7386.00 RAW VALUE LIMIT TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: HORIZONTAL AT 3 M EMISSION ANTENNA HEIGHT (m)
(dBuV)
(dBuV/m) MARGIN (dB) LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 109.6 PK 77.30 106.6 AV 74.30 59.2 PK 26.80 47.3 AV 14.90 57.3 PK 51.90 53.3 AV 47.90 57.6 PK 46.20 49.9 AV 38.50 ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: VERTICAL AT 3 M EMISSION 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.30 H 1.30 H 1.40 H 1.40 H 39 39 39 39 245 245 301 301
-14.8
-6.7
-16.7
-0.7
-16.4
-4.1 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0 RAW VALUE MARGIN (dB) ANTENNA HEIGHT (m) TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
*2462.00
*2462.00 2483.50 2483.50 4924.00 4924.00 7386.00 7386.00 REMARKS:
LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 110.9 PK 107.0 AV 60.2 PK 48.8 AV 52.1 PK 46.6 AV 58.9 PK 51.9 AV LIMIT
(dBuV/m) 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0
-13.8
-5.2
-21.9
-7.4
-15.1
-2.1 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.25 V 1.25 V 1.20 V 1.20 V 65 65 65 65 223 223 253 253
(dBuV) 78.60 74.70 27.80 16.40 46.70 41.20 47.50 40.50 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.30 32.30 32.40 32.40 5.40 5.40 11.40 11.40 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.30 32.30 32.40 32.40 5.40 5.40 11.40 11.40 1. Emission Level(dBuV/m) = Raw Value(dBuV) + Correction Factor(dB/m) 2. Correction Factor(dB/m) = Antenna Factor(dB/m) + Cable Factor(dB) Pre-Amplifier Factor(dB) 3. The other emission levels were very low against the limit. 4. Margin value = Emission Level Limit value 5. * : Fundamental frequency. Report No.: RF140506C12 22 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 802.11g EUT TEST CONDITION CHANNEL Channel 1 INPUT POWER 120Vac, 60Hz MEASUREMENT DETAIL FREQUENCY RANGE 1 ~ 25GHz DETECTOR Peak (PK) FUNCTION Average (AV) ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS 25deg. C, 67%RH TESTED BY Alan Wu NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6 2390.00 2390.00
*2412.00
*2412.00 4824.00 4824.00 RAW VALUE LIMIT TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: HORIZONTAL AT 3 M EMISSION ANTENNA HEIGHT (m)
(dBuV)
-5.4
-2.4
(dBuV/m) 74.0 54.0 MARGIN (dB) LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 68.6 PK 36.60 51.6 AV 19.60 109.5 PK 77.50 97.7 AV 65.70 50.5 PK 45.30 36.5 AV 31.30 ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: VERTICAL AT 3 M EMISSION 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 46 46 46 46 234 234
-23.5
-17.5 74.0 54.0 RAW VALUE MARGIN (dB) ANTENNA HEIGHT (m) TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6 2390.00 2390.00
*2412.00
*2412.00 4824.00 4824.00 REMARKS:
LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 71.8 PK 53.4 AV 111.2 PK 99.8 AV 47.7 PK 35.3 AV LIMIT
(dBuV/m) 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0
-2.2
-0.6
-26.3
-18.7 1.02 V 1.02 V 1.02 V 1.02 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 63 63 63 63 306 306
(dBuV) 39.80 21.40 79.20 67.80 42.50 30.10 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.00 32.00 32.00 32.00 5.20 5.20 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.00 32.00 32.00 32.00 5.20 5.20 1. Emission Level(dBuV/m) = Raw Value(dBuV) + Correction Factor(dB/m) 2. Correction Factor(dB/m) = Antenna Factor(dB/m) + Cable Factor(dB) Pre-Amplifier Factor(dB) 3. The other emission levels were very low against the limit. 4. Margin value = Emission Level Limit value 5. * : Fundamental frequency. Report No.: RF140506C12 23 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 EUT TEST CONDITION CHANNEL Channel 6 INPUT POWER 120Vac, 60Hz MEASUREMENT DETAIL FREQUENCY RANGE 1 ~ 25GHz DETECTOR Peak (PK) FUNCTION Average (AV) ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS 25deg. C, 67%RH TESTED BY Alan Wu NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6 2390.00 2390.00
*2437.00
*2437.00 4874.00 4874.00 RAW VALUE LIMIT TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: HORIZONTAL AT 3 M EMISSION ANTENNA HEIGHT (m)
(dBuV)
-1.7
-0.4
(dBuV/m) 74.0 54.0 MARGIN (dB) LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 72.3 PK 40.30 53.6 AV 21.60 114.3 PK 82.20 101.8 AV 69.70 54.1 PK 48.80 42.1 AV 36.80 ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: VERTICAL AT 3 M EMISSION 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 39 39 39 39 235 235
-19.9
-11.9 74.0 54.0 RAW VALUE MARGIN (dB) ANTENNA HEIGHT (m) TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6 2390.00 2390.00
*2437.00
*2437.00 4874.00 4874.00 REMARKS:
LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 72.0 PK 53.8 AV 114.6 PK 102.8 AV 52.5 PK 38.7 AV LIMIT
(dBuV/m) 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0
-2.0
-0.2
-21.5
-15.3 1.04 V 1.04 V 1.04 V 1.04 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 288 288 288 288 306 306
(dBuV) 40.00 21.80 82.50 70.70 47.20 33.40 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.00 32.00 32.10 32.10 5.30 5.30 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.00 32.00 32.10 32.10 5.30 5.30 1. Emission Level(dBuV/m) = Raw Value(dBuV) + Correction Factor(dB/m) 2. Correction Factor(dB/m) = Antenna Factor(dB/m) + Cable Factor(dB) Pre-Amplifier Factor(dB) 3. The other emission levels were very low against the limit. 4. Margin value = Emission Level Limit value 5. * : Fundamental frequency. Report No.: RF140506C12 24 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 EUT TEST CONDITION CHANNEL Channel 11 INPUT POWER 120Vac, 60Hz MEASUREMENT DETAIL FREQUENCY RANGE 1 ~ 25GHz DETECTOR Peak (PK) FUNCTION Average (AV) ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS 25deg. C, 67%RH TESTED BY Alan Wu NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6
*2462.00
*2462.00 2483.50 2483.50 4924.00 4924.00 RAW VALUE LIMIT TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: HORIZONTAL AT 3 M EMISSION ANTENNA HEIGHT (m)
(dBuV)
(dBuV/m) MARGIN (dB) LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 108.1 PK 75.80 97.9 AV 65.60 67.9 PK 35.50 53.2 AV 20.80 50.3 PK 44.90 37.9 AV 32.50 ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: VERTICAL AT 3 M EMISSION 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.29 H 1.29 H 47 47 47 47 262 262
-6.1
-0.8
-23.7
-16.1 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0 RAW VALUE MARGIN (dB) ANTENNA HEIGHT (m) TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6
*2462.00
*2462.00 2483.50 2483.50 4924.00 4924.00 REMARKS:
LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 110.8 PK 99.2 AV 70.9 PK 53.8 AV 48.4 PK 35.4 AV LIMIT
(dBuV/m) 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0
-3.1
-0.2
-25.6
-18.6 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.22 V 1.22 V 285 285 285 285 311 311
(dBuV) 78.50 66.90 38.50 21.40 43.00 30.00 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.30 32.30 32.40 32.40 5.40 5.40 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.30 32.30 32.40 32.40 5.40 5.40 1. Emission Level(dBuV/m) = Raw Value(dBuV) + Correction Factor(dB/m) 2. Correction Factor(dB/m) = Antenna Factor(dB/m) + Cable Factor(dB) Pre-Amplifier Factor(dB) 3. The other emission levels were very low against the limit. 4. Margin value = Emission Level Limit value 5. * : Fundamental frequency. Report No.: RF140506C12 25 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 802.11n (20MHz) EUT TEST CONDITION CHANNEL Channel 1 INPUT POWER 120Vac, 60Hz MEASUREMENT DETAIL FREQUENCY RANGE 1 ~ 25GHz DETECTOR Peak (PK) FUNCTION Average (AV) ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS 25deg. C, 67%RH TESTED BY Alan Wu NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6 2390.00 2390.00
*2412.00
*2412.00 4824.00 4824.00 RAW VALUE LIMIT TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: HORIZONTAL AT 3 M EMISSION ANTENNA HEIGHT (m)
(dBuV)
-5.2
-0.2
(dBuV/m) 74.0 54.0 MARGIN (dB) LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 68.8 PK 36.80 53.8 AV 21.80 108.9 PK 76.90 97.0 AV 65.00 49.7 PK 44.50 36.6 AV 31.40 ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: VERTICAL AT 3 M EMISSION 1.54 H 1.54 H 1.54 H 1.54 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 214 214 214 214 234 234
-24.3
-17.4 74.0 54.0 RAW VALUE MARGIN (dB) ANTENNA HEIGHT (m) TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6 2390.00 2390.00
*2412.00
*2412.00 4824.00 4824.00 REMARKS:
LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 69.6 PK 53.3 AV 109.9 PK 97.9 AV 47.9 PK 35.1 AV LIMIT
(dBuV/m) 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0
-4.4
-0.7
-26.1
-18.9 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 67 67 67 67 306 306
(dBuV) 37.60 21.30 77.90 65.90 42.70 29.90 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.00 32.00 32.00 32.00 5.20 5.20 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.00 32.00 32.00 32.00 5.20 5.20 1. Emission Level(dBuV/m) = Raw Value(dBuV) + Correction Factor(dB/m) 2. Correction Factor(dB/m) = Antenna Factor(dB/m) + Cable Factor(dB) Pre-Amplifier Factor(dB) 3. The other emission levels were very low against the limit. 4. Margin value = Emission Level Limit value 5. * : Fundamental frequency. Report No.: RF140506C12 26 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 EUT TEST CONDITION CHANNEL Channel 6 INPUT POWER 120Vac, 60Hz MEASUREMENT DETAIL FREQUENCY RANGE 1 ~ 25GHz DETECTOR Peak (PK) FUNCTION Average (AV) ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS 25deg. C, 67%RH TESTED BY Alan Wu NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6 2390.00 2390.00
*2437.00
*2437.00 4874.00 4874.00 RAW VALUE LIMIT TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: HORIZONTAL AT 3 M EMISSION ANTENNA HEIGHT (m)
(dBuV)
-3.1
-1.1
(dBuV/m) 74.0 54.0 MARGIN (dB) LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 70.9 PK 38.90 52.9 AV 20.90 113.1 PK 81.00 101.2 AV 69.10 57.8 PK 52.50 44.7 AV 39.40 ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: VERTICAL AT 3 M EMISSION 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.28 H 1.28 H 228 228 228 228 262 262
-16.2
-9.3 74.0 54.0 RAW VALUE MARGIN (dB) ANTENNA HEIGHT (m) TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6 2390.00 2390.00
*2437.00
*2437.00 4874.00 4874.00 REMARKS:
LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 70.8 PK 53.3 AV 113.1 PK 101.2 AV 51.7 PK 39.2 AV LIMIT
(dBuV/m) 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0
-3.2
-0.7
-22.3
-14.8 1.06 V 1.06 V 1.06 V 1.06 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 134 134 134 134 307 307
(dBuV) 38.80 21.30 81.00 69.10 46.40 33.90 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.00 32.00 32.10 32.10 5.30 5.30 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.00 32.00 32.10 32.10 5.30 5.30 1. Emission Level(dBuV/m) = Raw Value(dBuV) + Correction Factor(dB/m) 2. Correction Factor(dB/m) = Antenna Factor(dB/m) + Cable Factor(dB) Pre-Amplifier Factor(dB) 3. The other emission levels were very low against the limit. 4. Margin value = Emission Level Limit value 5. * : Fundamental frequency. Report No.: RF140506C12 27 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 EUT TEST CONDITION CHANNEL Channel 11 INPUT POWER 120Vac, 60Hz MEASUREMENT DETAIL FREQUENCY RANGE 1 ~ 25GHz DETECTOR Peak (PK) FUNCTION Average (AV) ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS 25deg. C, 67%RH TESTED BY Alan Wu NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6
*2462.00
*2462.00 2483.50 2483.50 4924.00 4924.00 RAW VALUE LIMIT TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: HORIZONTAL AT 3 M EMISSION ANTENNA HEIGHT (m)
(dBuV)
(dBuV/m) MARGIN (dB) LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 109.7 PK 77.40 97.5 AV 65.20 71.1 PK 38.70 53.2 AV 20.80 50.0 PK 44.60 37.2 AV 31.80 ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: VERTICAL AT 3 M EMISSION 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.26 H 1.26 H 47 47 47 47 263 263
-2.9
-0.8
-24.0
-16.8 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0 RAW VALUE MARGIN (dB) ANTENNA HEIGHT (m) TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6
*2462.00
*2462.00 2483.50 2483.50 4924.00 4924.00 REMARKS:
LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 110.1 PK 98.1 AV 71.4 PK 53.4 AV 47.8 PK 34.9 AV LIMIT
(dBuV/m) 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0
-2.6
-0.6
-26.2
-19.1 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 54 54 54 54 306 306
(dBuV) 77.80 65.80 39.00 21.00 42.40 29.50 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.30 32.30 32.40 32.40 5.40 5.40 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.30 32.30 32.40 32.40 5.40 5.40 1. Emission Level(dBuV/m) = Raw Value(dBuV) + Correction Factor(dB/m) 2. Correction Factor(dB/m) = Antenna Factor(dB/m) + Cable Factor(dB) Pre-Amplifier Factor(dB) 3. The other emission levels were very low against the limit. 4. Margin value = Emission Level Limit value 5. * : Fundamental frequency. Report No.: RF140506C12 28 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 802.11n (40MHz) EUT TEST CONDITION CHANNEL Channel 3 INPUT POWER 120Vac, 60Hz MEASUREMENT DETAIL FREQUENCY RANGE 1 ~ 25GHz DETECTOR Peak (PK) FUNCTION Average (AV) ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS 25deg. C, 67%RH TESTED BY Alan Wu NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6 2390.00 2390.00
*2422.00
*2422.00 4844.00 4844.00 RAW VALUE LIMIT TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: HORIZONTAL AT 3 M EMISSION ANTENNA HEIGHT (m)
(dBuV)
-3.3
-0.4
(dBuV/m) 74.0 54.0 MARGIN (dB) LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 70.7 PK 38.70 53.6 AV 21.60 101.8 PK 69.70 88.7 AV 56.60 49.2 PK 43.90 36.1 AV 30.80 ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: VERTICAL AT 3 M EMISSION 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 43 43 43 43 238 238
-24.8
-17.9 74.0 54.0 RAW VALUE MARGIN (dB) ANTENNA HEIGHT (m) TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6 2390.00 2390.00
*2422.00
*2422.00 4844.00 4844.00 REMARKS:
LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 70.9 PK 53.8 AV 103.0 PK 89.7 AV 47.2 PK 34.4 AV LIMIT
(dBuV/m) 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0
-3.1
-0.2
-26.8
-19.6 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 290 290 290 290 302 302
(dBuV) 38.90 21.80 70.90 57.60 41.90 29.10 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.00 32.00 32.10 32.10 5.30 5.30 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.00 32.00 32.10 32.10 5.30 5.30 1. Emission Level(dBuV/m) = Raw Value(dBuV) + Correction Factor(dB/m) 2. Correction Factor(dB/m) = Antenna Factor(dB/m) + Cable Factor(dB) Pre-Amplifier Factor(dB) 3. The other emission levels were very low against the limit. 4. Margin value = Emission Level Limit value 5. * : Fundamental frequency. Report No.: RF140506C12 29 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 EUT TEST CONDITION CHANNEL Channel 6 INPUT POWER 120Vac, 60Hz MEASUREMENT DETAIL FREQUENCY RANGE 1 ~ 25GHz DETECTOR Peak (PK) FUNCTION Average (AV) ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS 25deg. C, 67%RH TESTED BY Alan Wu NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6
*2437.00
*2437.00 2483.50 2483.50 4874.00 4874.00 RAW VALUE LIMIT TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: HORIZONTAL AT 3 M EMISSION ANTENNA HEIGHT (m)
(dBuV)
(dBuV/m) MARGIN (dB) LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 105.2 PK 73.10 93.4 AV 61.30 65.6 PK 33.20 52.5 AV 20.10 52.7 PK 47.40 40.6 AV 35.30 ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: VERTICAL AT 3 M EMISSION 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 200 200 200 200 247 247
-8.4
-1.5
-21.3
-13.4 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0 RAW VALUE MARGIN (dB) ANTENNA HEIGHT (m) TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6
*2437.00
*2437.00 2483.50 2483.50 4874.00 4874.00 REMARKS:
LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 106.1 PK 94.1 AV 66.8 PK 53.4 AV 50.2 PK 37.5 AV LIMIT
(dBuV/m) 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0
-7.2
-0.6
-23.8
-16.5 1.28 V 1.28 V 1.28 V 1.28 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 66 66 66 66 303 303
(dBuV) 74.00 62.00 34.40 21.00 44.90 32.20 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.10 32.10 32.40 32.40 5.30 5.30 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.10 32.10 32.40 32.40 5.30 5.30 1. Emission Level(dBuV/m) = Raw Value(dBuV) + Correction Factor(dB/m) 2. Correction Factor(dB/m) = Antenna Factor(dB/m) + Cable Factor(dB) Pre-Amplifier Factor(dB) 3. The other emission levels were very low against the limit. 4. Margin value = Emission Level Limit value 5. * : Fundamental frequency. Report No.: RF140506C12 30 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 EUT TEST CONDITION CHANNEL Channel 9 INPUT POWER 120Vac, 60Hz MEASUREMENT DETAIL FREQUENCY RANGE 1 ~ 25GHz DETECTOR Peak (PK) FUNCTION Average (AV) ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS 25deg. C, 67%RH TESTED BY Alan Wu NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6
*2452.00
*2452.00 2483.50 2483.50 4904.00 4904.00 RAW VALUE LIMIT TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: HORIZONTAL AT 3 M EMISSION ANTENNA HEIGHT (m)
(dBuV)
(dBuV/m) MARGIN (dB) LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 102.3 PK 70.00 88.5 AV 56.20 69.8 PK 37.40 52.6 AV 20.20 49.3 PK 43.90 36.1 AV 30.70 ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: VERTICAL AT 3 M EMISSION 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.25 H 1.25 H 48 48 48 48 265 265
-4.2
-1.4
-24.7
-17.9 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0 RAW VALUE MARGIN (dB) ANTENNA HEIGHT (m) TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6
*2452.00
*2452.00 2483.50 2483.50 4904.00 4904.00 REMARKS:
LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 103.6 PK 90.7 AV 70.6 PK 53.8 AV 46.2 PK 33.3 AV LIMIT
(dBuV/m) 74.0 54.0 74.0 54.0
-3.4
-0.2
-27.8
-20.7 1.03 V 1.03 V 1.03 V 1.03 V 1.00 V 1.00 V 71 71 71 71 307 307
(dBuV) 71.30 58.40 38.20 21.40 40.80 27.90 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.30 32.30 32.40 32.40 5.40 5.40 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m) 32.30 32.30 32.40 32.40 5.40 5.40 1. Emission Level(dBuV/m) = Raw Value(dBuV) + Correction Factor(dB/m) 2. Correction Factor(dB/m) = Antenna Factor(dB/m) + Cable Factor(dB) Pre-Amplifier Factor(dB) 3. The other emission levels were very low against the limit. 4. Margin value = Emission Level Limit value 5. * : Fundamental frequency. Report No.: RF140506C12 31 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 Channel 6 BELOW 1GHz WORST-CASE DATA802.11n (20MHz) EUT TEST CONDITION CHANNEL INPUT POWER(SYSTEM) ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS TEST MODE 25deg. C, 67%RH 120Vac, 60Hz A MEASUREMENT DETAIL FREQUENCY RANGE Below 1000MHz DETECTOR FUNCTION Quasi-Peak TESTED BY Alan Wu NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6 88.11 249.17 268.57 375.29 600.38 749.79 RAW VALUE LIMIT TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: HORIZONTAL AT 3 M EMISSION ANTENNA HEIGHT (m)
(dBuV)
(dBuV/m) MARGIN (dB) LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 30.2 QP 49.70 40.9 QP 55.30 33.4 QP 46.90 33.5 QP 44.60 30.0 QP 36.80 30.3 QP 34.00 ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: VERTICAL AT 3 M EMISSION 2.00 H 1.24 H 1.00 H 2.00 H 1.24 H 1.00 H
-13.3
-5.1
-12.6
-12.5
-16.0
-15.7 43.5 46.0 46.0 46.0 46.0 46.0 97 110 262 270 81 215 RAW VALUE MARGIN (dB) ANTENNA HEIGHT (m) TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6 55.13 101.69 249.17 375.29 600.38 875.91 REMARKS:
LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 36.8 QP 38.1 QP 36.7 QP 32.6 QP 29.7 QP 32.7 QP LIMIT
(dBuV/m) 40.0 43.5 46.0 46.0 46.0 46.0
-3.2
-5.4
-9.3
-13.4
-16.3
-13.3 1.00 V 1.00 V 1.99 V 1.49 V 1.49 V 1.24 V 4 28 187 112 213 290
(dBuV) 50.90 56.20 51.10 43.70 36.50 34.70 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m)
-19.50
-14.40
-13.50
-11.10
-6.80
-3.70 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m)
-14.10
-18.10
-14.40
-11.10
-6.80
-2.00 1. Emission Level(dBuV/m) = Raw Value(dBuV) + Correction Factor(dB/m) 2. Correction Factor(dB/m) = Antenna Factor(dB/m) + Cable Factor(dB) 3. The other emission levels were very low against the limit. 4. Margin value = Emission Level Limit value Pre-Amplifier Factor (dB) Report No.: RF140506C12 32 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 EUT TEST CONDITION CHANNEL Channel 6 INPUT POWER 120Vac, 60Hz MEASUREMENT DETAIL FREQUENCY RANGE Below 1000MHz DETECTOR FUNCTION Quasi-Peak ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS TEST MODE 25deg. C, 67%RH TESTED BY Alan Wu B NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6 142.44 249.17 375.29 400.52 600.38 749.79 RAW VALUE LIMIT TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: HORIZONTAL AT 3 M EMISSION ANTENNA HEIGHT (m)
(dBuV)
(dBuV/m) MARGIN (dB) LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 35.1 QP 49.20 39.4 QP 53.80 35.2 QP 46.30 29.5 QP 40.30 29.4 QP 36.20 29.5 QP 33.20 ANTENNA POLARITY & TEST DISTANCE: VERTICAL AT 3 M EMISSION 1.99 H 1.24 H 1.00 H 1.00 H 1.24 H 1.00 H
-8.4
-6.6
-10.8
-16.5
-16.6
-16.5 43.5 46.0 46.0 46.0 46.0 46.0 280 249 128 175 157 235 RAW VALUE MARGIN (dB) ANTENNA HEIGHT (m) TABLE ANGLE
(Degree) NO. FREQ. (MHz) 1 2 3 4 5 6 55.13 90.05 249.17 375.29 499.48 600.38 REMARKS:
LEVEL
(dBuV/m) 36.6 QP 36.2 QP 36.6 QP 33.4 QP 27.9 QP 26.9 QP LIMIT
(dBuV/m) 40.0 43.5 46.0 46.0 46.0 46.0
-3.4
-7.3
-9.4
-12.6
-18.1
-19.1 1.24 V 1.24 V 1.24 V 1.24 V 2.00 V 1.00 V 8 93 178 209 211 13
(dBuV) 50.70 55.80 51.00 44.50 36.80 33.70 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m)
-14.10
-14.40
-11.10
-10.80
-6.80
-3.70 CORRECTION FACTOR
(dB/m)
-14.10
-19.60
-14.40
-11.10
-8.90
-6.80 1. Emission Level(dBuV/m) = Raw Value(dBuV) + Correction Factor(dB/m) 2. Correction Factor(dB/m) = Antenna Factor(dB/m) + Cable Factor(dB) 3. The other emission levels were very low against the limit. 4. Margin value = Emission Level Limit value Pre-Amplifier Factor (dB) Report No.: RF140506C12 33 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 4.2 CONDUCTED EMISSION MEASUREMENT 4.2.1 LIMITS OF CONDUCTED EMISSION MEASUREMENT FREQUENCY OF EMISSION (MHz) CONDUCTED LIMIT (dBV) 0.15 ~ 0.5 0.5 ~ 5 5 ~ 30 Quasi-peak 66 to 56 56 60 Average 56 to 46 46 50 NOTE: 1. The lower limit shall apply at the transition frequencies. 2. The limit decreases in line with the logarithm of the frequency in the range of 0.15 to 0.50MHz. 3. All emanations from a class A/B digital device or system, including any network of conductors and apparatus connected thereto, shall not exceed the level of field strengths specified above. 4.2.2 TEST INSTRUMENTS DESCRIPTION &
MANUFACTURER MODEL NO. SERIAL NO. DATE OF CALIBRATION DUE DATE OF CALIBRATION 5D-FB 100288 ESCS30 Apr. 23, 2015 Apr. 24, 2014 Cable-HYCO2-01 Dec. 27, 2013 Test Receiver ROHDE & SCHWARZ RF signal cable Woken LISN ROHDE & SCHWARZ
(EUT) LISN ROHDE & SCHWARZ
(Peripheral) Software ADT NOTE: 1. The calibration interval of the above test instruments is 12 months and the calibrations are BV ADT_Cond_ Dec. 23, 2013 Dec. 22, 2014 Dec. 26, 2014 Jul. 08, 2013 Jul. 07, 2014 ESH2-Z5 ESH3-Z5 V7.3.7.3 100100 100312 NA NA NA traceable to NML/ROC and NIST/USA. 2. The test was performed in HwaYa Shielded Room 2. 3. The VCCI Site Registration No. is C-2047. Report No.: RF140506C12 34 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 4.2.3 TEST PROCEDURES a. The EUT was placed 0.4 meters from the conducting wall of the shielded room with EUT being connected to the power mains through a line impedance stabilization network (LISN). Other support units were connected to the power mains through another LISN. The two LISNs provide 50 ohm/ 50uH of coupling impedance for the measuring instrument. b. Both lines of the power mains connected to the EUT were checked for maximum conducted interference. c. The frequency range from 150kHz to 30MHz was searched. Emission levels under (Limit - 20dB) was not recorded. NOTE: All modes of operation were investigated and the worst-case emissions are reported. 4.2.4 DEVIATION FROM TEST STANDARD No deviation. 4.2.5 TEST SETUP Ve rtic a l G ro u n d R e fe re n c e P la n e Te s t R e c e iv e r 4 0 c m E U T L IS N 8 0 c m H o riz o n ta l G ro u n d R e fe re n c e P la n e N o te : 1 .S u p p o rt u n its w e re c o n n e c te d to s e c o n d L IS N . 2 .B o th o f L IS N s (A M N ) a re 8 0 c m fro m E U T a n d a t le a s t 8 0 fro m o th e r u n its a n d o th e r m e ta l p la n e s For the actual test configuration, please refer to the attached file (Test Setup Photo). 4.2.6 EUT OPERATING CONDITIONS Same as 4.1.6. Report No.: RF140506C12 35 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 4.2.7 TEST RESULTS CONDUCTED WORST-CASE DATA802.11n (20MHz) PHASE TEST MODE Line 1 A 6dB BANDWIDTH 9kHz No 1 2 3 4 5 6 Freq.
[MHz]
0.22812 0.35703 0.61094 0.86875 1.46484 9.96484 Corr. Reading Value Emission Level Factor
(dB) 0.24 0.22 0.25 0.28 0.33 0.51
[dB (uV)]
Q.P. AV. 31.45 21.92 27.90 20.40 31.70 22.70 30.48 18.91 29.52 18.51 37.13 27.63
[dB (uV)]
AV. 22.16 20.62 22.95 19.19 18.84 28.14 Q.P. 31.69 28.12 31.95 30.76 29.85 37.64 Limit
[dB (uV)]
AV. 52.52 48.80 46.00 46.00 46.00 50.00 Q.P. 62.52 58.80 56.00 56.00 56.00 60.00 Margin
(dB) Q.P.
-30.83
-30.67
-24.05
-25.24
-26.15
-22.36 AV.
-30.36
-28.17
-23.05
-26.81
-27.16
-21.86 REMARKS:
1. Q.P. and AV. are abbreviations of quasi-peak and average individually. 2. The emission levels of other frequencies were very low against the limit. 3. Margin value = Emission level - Limit value 4. Correction factor = Insertion loss + Cable loss 5. Emission Level = Correction Factor + Reading Value Report No.: RF140506C12 36 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 PHASE TEST MODE Line 2 A 6dB BANDWIDTH 9kHz No 1 2 3 4 5 6 Freq.
[MHz]
0.43906 0.52891 1.13281 1.52734 4.66016 10.76563 Corr. Reading Value Emission Level Factor
(dB) 0.30 0.30 0.30 0.34 0.50 0.59
[dB (uV)]
Q.P. AV. 33.11 24.77 30.68 22.78 24.63 15.78 27.08 18.25 36.96 26.66 36.97 27.32
[dB (uV)]
AV. 25.07 23.08 16.08 18.59 27.16 27.91 Q.P. 33.41 30.98 24.93 27.42 37.46 37.56 Limit
[dB (uV)]
AV. 47.08 46.00 46.00 46.00 46.00 50.00 Q.P. 57.08 56.00 56.00 56.00 56.00 60.00 Margin
(dB) Q.P.
-23.67
-25.02
-31.07
-28.58
-18.54
-22.44 AV.
-22.01
-22.92
-29.92
-27.41
-18.84
-22.09 REMARKS:
1. Q.P. and AV. are abbreviations of quasi-peak and average individually. 2. The emission levels of other frequencies were very low against the limit. 3. Margin value = Emission level - Limit value 4. Correction factor = Insertion loss + Cable loss 5. Emission Level = Correction Factor + Reading Value Report No.: RF140506C12 37 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 PHASE TEST MODE Line 1 B 6dB BANDWIDTH 9kHz No 1 2 3 4 5 6 Freq.
[MHz]
0.16172 0.27891 0.76328 2.56641 11.55078 29.51953 Corr. Reading Value Emission Level Factor
(dB) 0.22 0.23 0.27 0.39 0.53 0.56
[dB (uV)]
Q.P. AV. 36.47 22.31 24.13 12.22 24.55 14.94 19.68 14.88 20.46 16.54 27.22 15.96
[dB (uV)]
AV. 22.53 12.45 15.21 15.27 17.07 16.52 Q.P. 36.69 24.36 24.82 20.07 20.99 27.78 Limit
[dB (uV)]
AV. 55.38 50.85 46.00 46.00 50.00 50.00 Q.P. 65.38 60.85 56.00 56.00 60.00 60.00 Margin
(dB) Q.P.
-28.68
-36.49
-31.18
-35.93
-39.01
-32.22 AV.
-32.84
-38.40
-30.79
-30.73
-32.93
-33.48 REMARKS:
1. Q.P. and AV. are abbreviations of quasi-peak and average individually. 2. The emission levels of other frequencies were very low against the limit. 3. Margin value = Emission level - Limit value 4. Correction factor = Insertion loss + Cable loss 5. Emission Level = Correction Factor + Reading Value Report No.: RF140506C12 38 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 PHASE TEST MODE Line 2 B 6dB BANDWIDTH 9kHz No 1 2 3 4 5 6 Freq.
[MHz]
0.16953 0.18906 0.36875 0.41953 0.71641 9.62500 Corr. Reading Value Emission Level Factor
(dB) 0.23 0.24 0.29 0.30 0.29 0.57
[dB (uV)]
Q.P. AV. 38.84 25.38 35.89 22.60 7.64 23.46 5.05 20.80 8.29 19.52 13.79 6.05
[dB (uV)]
AV. 25.61 22.84 7.93 5.35 8.58 6.62 Q.P. 39.07 36.13 23.75 21.10 19.81 14.36 Limit
[dB (uV)]
AV. 54.98 54.08 48.53 47.46 46.00 50.00 Q.P. 64.98 64.08 58.53 57.46 56.00 60.00 Margin
(dB) Q.P.
-25.91
-27.95
-34.78
-36.36
-36.19
-45.64 AV.
-29.37
-31.24
-40.60
-42.11
-37.42
-43.38 REMARKS:
1. Q.P. and AV. are abbreviations of quasi-peak and average individually. 2. The emission levels of other frequencies were very low against the limit. 3. Margin value = Emission level - Limit value 4. Correction factor = Insertion loss + Cable loss 5. Emission Level = Correction Factor + Reading Value Report No.: RF140506C12 39 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 4.3 6dB BANDWIDTH MEASUREMENT 4.3.1 LIMITS OF 6dB BANDWIDTH MEASUREMENT The minimum of 6dB Bandwidth Measurement is 0.5 MHz. 4.3.2 TEST SETUP EUT SPECTRUM ANALYZER 10dB ATTENUATION PAD 4.3.3 TEST INSTRUMENTS Refer to section 4.1.2 to get information of above instrument. 4.3.4 TEST PROCEDURE a. Set resolution bandwidth (RBW) = 100kHz b. Set the video bandwidth (VBW) 3 x RBW, Detector = Peak. c. Trace mode = max hold. d. Sweep = auto couple. e. Measure the maximum width of the emission that is constrained by the frequencies associated with the two amplitude points (upper and lower) that are attenuated by 6 dB relative to the maximum level measured in the fundamental emission 4.3.5 DEVIATION FROM TEST STANDARD No deviation. 4.3.6 EUT OPERATING CONDITIONS The software provided by client to enable the EUT under transmission condition continuously at lowest, middle and highest channel frequencies individually. Report No.: RF140506C12 40 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 4.3.7 TEST RESULTS 802.11b CHANNEL FREQUENCY
(MHz) 1 6 11 802.11g 2412 2437 2462 CHANNEL FREQUENCY
(MHz) 1 6 11 2412 2437 2462 802.11n (20MHz) CHANNEL FREQUENCY
(MHz) 1 6 11 2412 2437 2462 802.11n (40MHz) CHANNEL FREQUENCY
(MHz) 3 6 9 2422 2437 2452 6dB BANDWIDTH (MHz) CHAIN 0 CHAIN 1 5.61 6.55 6.56 6.08 5.60 5.62 MINIMUM LIMIT (MHz) PASS / FAIL 0.5 0.5 0.5 PASS PASS PASS 6dB BANDWIDTH (MHz) CHAIN 0 CHAIN 1 15.15 16.32 13.84 15.15 15.38 15.11 MINIMUM LIMIT (MHz) PASS / FAIL 0.5 0.5 0.5 PASS PASS PASS 6dB BANDWIDTH (MHz) CHAIN 0 CHAIN 1 15.12 15.17 14.47 15.12 14.74 15.14 MINIMUM LIMIT (MHz) PASS / FAIL 0.5 0.5 0.5 PASS PASS PASS 6dB BANDWIDTH (MHz) CHAIN 0 CHAIN 1 33.97 32.76 33.97 33.93 33.86 35.14 MINIMUM LIMIT (MHz) PASS / FAIL 0.5 0.5 0.5 PASS PASS PASS Report No.: RF140506C12 41 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 802.11b SPECTRUM PLOT OF WORST VALUE 802.11g 802.11n (20MHz) 802.11n (40MHz) Report No.: RF140506C12 42 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 4.4 CONDUCTED OUTPUT POWER 4.4.1 LIMITS OF CONDUCTED OUTPUT POWER MEASUREMENT For systems using digital modulation in the 24002483.5 MHz bands: 1 Watt
(30dBm) Per KDB 662911 D01 Multiple Transmitter Output v02r01 Method of conducted output power measurement on IEEE 802.11 devices, Array Gain = 0 dB (i.e., no array gain) for NANT 4;
Array Gain = 0 dB (i.e., no array gain) for channel widths 40 MHz for any NANT;
Array Gain = 5 log(NANT/NSS) dB or 3 dB, whichever is less for 20-MHz channel widths with NANT 5. For power measurements on all other devices: Array Gain = 10 log(NANT/NSS) dB. 4.4.2 TEST SETUP EUT 10dB ATTENUATION PAD Power Sensor Power Meter 4.4.3 TEST INSTRUMENTS Refer to section 4.1.2 to get information of above instrument. 4.4.4 TEST PROCEDURES A peak / average power sensor was used on the output port of the EUT. A power meter was used to read the response of the peak / average power sensor. Record the power level. Report No.: RF140506C12 43 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 4.4.5 DEVIATION FROM TEST STANDARD No deviation. 4.4.6 EUT OPERATING CONDITIONS Same as Item 4.3.6. Report No.: RF140506C12 44 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 4.4.7 TEST RESULTS 802.11b CHAN. FREQ.
(MHz) 1 6 11 2412 2437 2462 802.11g CHAN. FREQ.
(MHz) 1 6 11 2412 2437 2462 802.11n (20MHz) CHAN. FREQ.
(MHz) 1 6 11 2412 2437 2462 802.11n (40MHz) CHAN. FREQ.
(MHz) AVG. POWER (dBm) CHAIN 0 CHAIN 1 19.62 21.11 20.02 18.41 19.52 18.17 AVG. POWER (dBm) CHAIN 0 CHAIN 1 17.51 22.56 18.82 17.12 20.89 17.92 AVG. POWER (dBm) CHAIN 0 CHAIN 1 17.41 22.83 17.33 16.72 20.96 16.72 TOTAL POWER
(mW) 160.965 218.658 166.077 TOTAL POWER
(mW) 107.887 303.046 138.152 TOTAL POWER
(mW) 102.070 316.605 101.064 TOTAL POWER
(dBm) 22.07 23.40 22.20 TOTAL POWER
(dBm) 20.33 24.82 21.40 TOTAL POWER
(dBm) 20.09 25.01 20.05 LIMIT
(dBm) PASS /
FAIL 30 30 30 PASS PASS PASS LIMIT
(dBm) PASS /
FAIL 30 30 30 PASS PASS PASS LIMIT
(dBm) PASS /
FAIL 30 30 30 PASS PASS PASS AVG. POWER (dBm) CHAIN 0 CHAIN 1 TOTAL POWER
(mW) TOTAL POWER
(dBm) LIMIT
(dBm) PASS /
FAIL 3 6 9 2422 2437 2452 13.16 16.64 14.01 12.56 16.14 13.52 38.731 87.247 47.668 15.88 19.41 16.78 30 30 30 PASS PASS PASS Report No.: RF140506C12 45 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 4.5 POWER SPECTRAL DENSITY MEASUREMENT 4.5.1 LIMITS OF POWER SPECTRAL DENSITY MEASUREMENT The Maximum of Power Spectral Density Measurement is 8dBm. 4.5.2 TEST SETUP EUT 10dB ATTENUATION PAD SPECTRUM ANALYZER 4.5.3 TEST INSTRUMENTS Refer to section 4.1.2 to get information of above instrument. 4.5.4 TEST PROCEDURE a. Set the RBW = 3 kHz, VBW =10 kHz, Detector = peak. b. Sweep time = auto couple, Trace mode = max hold, allow trace to fully stabilize. c. Use the peak marker function to determine the maximum power level in any 100 kHz band segment within the fundamental EBW. 4.5.5 DEVIATION FROM TEST STANDARD No deviation. 4.5.6 EUT OPERATING CONDITION Same as Item 4.3.6 Report No.: RF140506C12 46 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 4.5.7 TEST RESULTS 802.11b TX chain Channel 0 1 1 6 11 1 6 11 Freq.
(MHz) 2412 2437 2462 2412 2437 2462 PSD
(dBm/3kHz)
-6.12
-5.95
-7.14
-8.87
-6.63
-8.16 10 log (N=2) dB Total PSD
(dBm/3kHz) Limit
(dBm/3kHz) 3.01 3.01 3.01 3.01 3.01 3.01
-3.11
-2.94
-4.13
-5.86
-3.62
-5.15 8 8 8 8 8 8 PASS
/FAIL PASS PASS PASS PASS PASS PASS NOTE: Directional gain = 2.87dBi + 10log(2) = 5.88dBi < 6dBi , so the limit no need to reduced. 802.11g TX chain Channel 0 1 1 6 11 1 6 11 Freq.
(MHz) 2412 2437 2462 2412 2437 2462 PSD
(dBm/3kHz)
-13.15
-8.60
-12.81
-14.77
-9.83
-13.61 10 log (N=2) dB 3.01 3.01 3.01 3.01 3.01 3.01 Total PSD
(dBm/3kHz)
-10.14
-5.59
-9.80
-11.76
-6.82
-10.60 Limit
(dBm/3kHz) 8 8 8 8 8 8 PASS
/FAIL PASS PASS PASS PASS PASS PASS NOTE: Directional gain = 2.87dBi + 10log(2) = 5.88dBi < 6dBi , so the limit no need to reduced. 802.11n (20MHz) TX chain Channel 0 1 1 6 11 1 6 11 Freq.
(MHz) 2412 2437 2462 2412 2437 2462 PSD
(dBm/3kHz)
-13.13
-8.42
-14.10
-14.89
-9.17
-15.16 10 log (N=2) dB 3.01 3.01 3.01 3.01 3.01 3.01 Total PSD
(dBm/3kHz)
-10.12
-5.41
-11.09
-11.88
-6.16
-12.15 Limit
(dBm/3kHz) 8 8 8 8 8 8 PASS
/FAIL PASS PASS PASS PASS PASS PASS NOTE: Directional gain = 2.87dBi + 10log(2) = 5.88dBi < 6dBi , so the limit no need to reduced. Report No.: RF140506C12 47 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 802.11n (40MHz) TX chain Channel 0 1 3 6 9 3 6 9 Freq.
(MHz) 2422 2437 2452 2422 2437 2452 PSD
(dBm/3kHz)
-22.16
-18.56
-21.68
-22.44
-17.69
-21.45 10 log (N=2) dB 3.01 3.01 3.01 3.01 3.01 3.01 Total PSD
(dBm/3kHz)
-19.15
-15.55
-18.67
-19.43
-14.68
-18.44 Limit
(dBm/3kHz) 8 8 8 8 8 8 PASS
/FAIL PASS PASS PASS PASS PASS PASS NOTE: Directional gain = 2.87dBi + 10log(2) = 5.88dBi < 6dBi , so the limit no need to reduced. 802.11b SPECTRUM PLOT OF WORST VALUE 802.11g 802.11n (20MHz) 802.11n (40MHz) Report No.: RF140506C12 48 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 4.6 CONDUCTED OUT OF BAND EMISSION MEASUREMENT 4.6.1 LIMITS OF CONDUCTED OUT OF BAND EMISSION MEASUREMENT Below 30dB of the highest emission level of operating band (in 100kHz Resolution Bandwidth). 4.6.2 TEST SETUP EUT 10dB ATTENUATION PAD SPECTRUM ANALYZER 4.6.3 TEST INSTRUMENTS Refer to section 4.1.2 to get information of above instrument. Report No.: RF140506C12 49 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 4.6.4 TEST PROCEDURE MEASUREMENT PROCEDURE REF 1. Set the RBW = 100 kHz. 2. Set the VBW 300 kHz. 3. Detector = peak. 4. Sweep time = auto couple. 5. Trace mode = max hold. 6. Allow trace to fully stabilize. 7. Use the peak marker function to determine the maximum power level in any 100 kHz band segment within the fundamental EBW. MEASUREMENT PROCEDURE OOBE 1. Set RBW = 100 kHz. 2. Set VBW 300 kHz. 3. Ensure that the number of measurement points span/RBW 4. According to measurement points to set differ measurement span. 5. Detector = peak. 6. Trace Mode = max hold. 7. Sweep = auto couple. 4.6.5 DEVIATION FROM TEST STANDARD No deviation. 4.6.6 EUT OPERATING CONDITION Same as Item 4.3.6 4.6.7 TEST RESULTS The conducted emission test is performed on each TX port of operating mode without summing or adding 10log (N) since the limit is relative emission limit. The spectrum plots are attached on the following pages. D1 line indicates the highest level, and D2 line indicates the 30dB offset below D1. It shows compliance with the requirement. Report No.: RF140506C12 50 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 802.11b CHAIN 0 Reference Level CH 1 CH 6 CH 11 CH 1 Band edge CH 11 Band edge Report No.: RF140506C12 51 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 CHAIN 1 Reference Level CH 1 CH 6 CH 11 CH 1 Band edge CH 11 Band edge Report No.: RF140506C12 52 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 802.11g CHAIN 0 Reference Level CH1 CH 6 CH 11 CH 1 Band edge CH 11 Band edge Report No.: RF140506C12 53 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 CHAIN 1 Reference Level CH 1 CH6 CH 11 CH 1 Band edge CH 11 Band edge Report No.: RF140506C12 54 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 802.11n (20MHz) CHAIN 0 Reference Level CH 1 CH 6 CH 11 CH 1 Band edge CH 11 Band edge Report No.: RF140506C12 55 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 CHAIN 1 Reference Level CH 1 CH 6 CH 11 CH 1 Band edge CH 11 Band edge Report No.: RF140506C12 56 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 802.11n (40MHz) CHAIN 0 CH 3 CH 6 CH 9 CH 3 Band edge CH 9 Band edge Report No.: RF140506C12 57 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 CHAIN 1 Reference Level CH 3 CH 6 CH 9 CH 3 Band edge CH 9 Band edge Report No.: RF140506C12 58 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 5. PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE TEST CONFIGURATION Please refer to the attached file (Test Setup Photo). Report No.: RF140506C12 59 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 6. INFORMATION ON THE TESTING LABORATORIES We, Bureau Veritas Consumer Products Services (H.K.) Ltd., Taoyuan Branch, were founded in 1988 to provide our best service in EMC, Radio, Telecom and Safety consultation. Our laboratories are accredited and approved according to ISO/IEC 17025. If you have any comments, please feel free to contact us at the following:
Linko EMC/RF Lab:
Tel: 886-2-26052180 Fax: 886-2-26051924 Hwa Ya EMC/RF/Safety Telecom Lab:
Tel: 886-3-3183232 Fax: 886-3-3270892 Email: service.adt@tw.bureauveritas.com Web Site: www.bureauveritas-adt.com Hsin Chu EMC/RF Lab:
Tel: 886-3-5935343 Fax: 886-3-5935342 The address and road map of all our labs can be found in our web site also. Report No.: RF140506C12 60 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0 7. APPENDIX A MODIFICATIONS RECORDERS FOR ENGINEERING CHANGES TO THE EUT BY THE LAB No any modifications are made to the EUT by the lab during the test.
---END---
Report No.: RF140506C12 61 of 61 Report Format Version 5.2.0
1 | Test Setup Photos | Test Setup Photos | 327.53 KiB | July 16 2014 |
PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE TEST CONFIGURATION CONDUCTED EMISSION TEST
(Test Mode A) 1 CONDUCTED EMISSION TEST
(Test Mode B) 2 RADIATED EMISSION TEST
(Test Mode A) 3 RADIATED EMISSION TEST
(Test Mode B) 4
frequency | equipment class | purpose | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2014-07-16 | 2412 ~ 2462 | DTS - Digital Transmission System | Original Equipment |
app s | Applicant Information | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Effective |
2014-07-16
|
||||
1 | Applicant's complete, legal business name |
Netgear Incorporated
|
||||
1 | FCC Registration Number (FRN) |
0022158786
|
||||
1 | Physical Address |
350 East Plumeria Drive
|
||||
1 |
San Jose
|
|||||
1 |
United States
|
|||||
app s | TCB Information | |||||
1 | TCB Application Email Address |
c******@curtis-straus.com
|
||||
1 | TCB Scope |
A4: UNII devices & low power transmitters using spread spectrum techniques
|
||||
app s | FCC ID | |||||
1 | Grantee Code |
PY3
|
||||
1 | Equipment Product Code |
14100256
|
||||
app s | Person at the applicant's address to receive grant or for contact | |||||
1 | Name |
D******** K******
|
||||
1 | Telephone Number |
40889********
|
||||
1 | Fax Number |
40890********
|
||||
1 |
d******@netgear.com
|
|||||
app s | Technical Contact | |||||
n/a | ||||||
app s | Non Technical Contact | |||||
n/a | ||||||
app s | Confidentiality (long or short term) | |||||
1 | Does this application include a request for confidentiality for any portion(s) of the data contained in this application pursuant to 47 CFR § 0.459 of the Commission Rules?: | Yes | ||||
1 | Long-Term Confidentiality Does this application include a request for confidentiality for any portion(s) of the data contained in this application pursuant to 47 CFR § 0.459 of the Commission Rules?: | No | ||||
if no date is supplied, the release date will be set to 45 calendar days past the date of grant. | ||||||
app s | Cognitive Radio & Software Defined Radio, Class, etc | |||||
1 | Is this application for software defined/cognitive radio authorization? | No | ||||
1 | Equipment Class | DTS - Digital Transmission System | ||||
1 | Description of product as it is marketed: (NOTE: This text will appear below the equipment class on the grant) | N300 WiFi Router | ||||
1 | Related OET KnowledgeDataBase Inquiry: Is there a KDB inquiry associated with this application? | No | ||||
1 | Modular Equipment Type | Does not apply | ||||
1 | Purpose / Application is for | Original Equipment | ||||
1 | Composite Equipment: Is the equipment in this application a composite device subject to an additional equipment authorization? | No | ||||
1 | Related Equipment: Is the equipment in this application part of a system that operates with, or is marketed with, another device that requires an equipment authorization? | No | ||||
1 | Grant Comments | Power listed is the maximum combined conducted output power. End-users and responsible parties must be provided with operating and installation instructions to ensure RF exposure compliance. The antenna(s) used for this transmitter must be installed to provide a separation distance of at least 20 cm from all persons and must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter, except in accordance with FCC multi-transmitter product guidelines. | ||||
1 | Is there an equipment authorization waiver associated with this application? | No | ||||
1 | If there is an equipment authorization waiver associated with this application, has the associated waiver been approved and all information uploaded? | No | ||||
app s | Test Firm Name and Contact Information | |||||
1 | Firm Name |
Bureau Veritas CPS (H.K.) Ltd., Taoyuan Branch
|
||||
1 | Name |
R****** C********
|
||||
1 | Telephone Number |
+886-******** Extension:
|
||||
1 | Fax Number |
+886-********
|
||||
1 |
r******@tw.bureauveritas.com
|
|||||
Equipment Specifications | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 1 | 15C | MO | 2412.00000000 | 2462.00000000 | 0.3170000 |
some individual PII (Personally Identifiable Information) available on the public forms may be redacted, original source may include additional details
This product uses the FCC Data API but is not endorsed or certified by the FCC