(12-Nov-2015, 12:25)Jamington2004 Wrote:If your are controlling with Spark on your iPhone the data flow to your main router and from it via Ethernet to your old router and to Dialog which is Ethernet connected. Same way back.(11-Nov-2015, 22:59)karebe Wrote: If you see both devices when old and new routers are connected than all devices are in the same network. You simply use switching functionality of your old one.
The old and new wifi have the same name I guess and so the devices try to jump from one wifi to the other one. The DHCP server is most probably on both routers. You have created an interesting configuration. Which more or less works accidentally.
As I said for the first step try a switch.
Ok - I don't really get any of this!
So how do I make sure the dialogue is on its own network as suggested by Devialet?
On my devices I now see 2 networks with different names - the main router which phones iPads and laptops are connected to - and the 2ndary router which the dialogue is connected to via EthernetĀ
So if I am controlling Spark on my iPhone on the main router - but the dialogue is on the second router what is happeningĀ
All I know is that for now it's stopped any cut outs! And last 2 days - no issues with devices dropping off main router (I hope this lasts!!!)
When you talk about two different networks. Do you mean wifi network names or the name of your routers? Actually an Ethernet network has no name.