In this definitive guide about EX6120 Range extender you will learn everything about the netgear wifi range extender from setting up EX6120 range extender using multiple ways from the ethernet cable, WPS Method, Netgear Installation Assistant, log in to the mywifiext genie wizard, updating firmware and factory resetting the device if anything went wrong.
Here is the LED light description for the netgear EX6120/AC1200 range extender device, there are mainly four LED Lights on the range extender the first one is the power LED light, Router Link, Client Link, Power and WPS.
There are various ways through which you can setup your netgear range extender device such as using the Website, WPS method or using nighthawk application and also you can setup the device as an access point.
Firmware is the software program that helps the hardware to run smoothly and efficiently, sometimes the extender device might not work well because of the outdated firmware. There are two ways through which you can update your EX6120 Extender firmware.
I have an R7000 that I had to downgrade the firmware in order for the arlo base station to connect. However I hear there are security issues with that router and the later firmwares do not support ARLO PRO Base station...(WTF)
So since I live in a large house with 6 cell phones, 8 computers, 3-4 laptops, ipads etc I thought I would updgrade the router to the R8300 but I need it to support the Arlo Pro system with 4 cameras and base station. Will this work? What wifi router do you guys recommend for my situation?
and the base station plugs into my R7000 router (like their directions say) so that I can remotely control the cameras i.e. turn them on and off, look at recorded events, etc. Almost immediately I was losing internet connections to the base station via my router. Upon further investigations I found that the Netgear R7000 has to have an arlo firmware update BUT the later firmwares removed arlo support so I am using the one with arlo support but then I find that the R7000 has a securtiy hole in it which I am guessing the later firmware will fix the hole but still leave out the arlo addon.
What i am finding out from this site is that the base station from arlo is a router designed to just connect to their cameras..fine but why all these problems connecting the base station to the internet via a router any router? So since I want my wifi to wrok seamlessly with all my cell phones, computers etc I thought I would upgrade the netgear router to R8300 or thereabouts but want to make sure it will connect aok and work with the arlo base station.
Hi--There are several posts concerning the netgear R7000..if one upgrades to the latest firmware 1.0.7.2 netgear warns you that support for the arlo is dropped and previous firmware that did support the arlo was removed from their site...don't know why and no one else does either from what I can tell.
You should not have to upgrade to a different router to get your Arlo to work properly. Update to the latest R7000 firmware and ignore the reference to the Arlo since it does not apply to your situation.
Jcwrks is correct, don't get the two confused. When people mention Arlo support, that is in reference to using the R7000 AS A ARLO BASE, not connecting your Arlo Base to the R7000. Just upgrade to the latest firmware and connect your Arlo Base to it, should be good to go. If you are having issues with connectivity, i woulod contact support. As to your question if some of those newer routers would work, sure they would.
I have my Pro base station plugged into my R7000 router with no issues. Update your router to the latest firmware if you haven't already (V1.0.7.2_1.1.93). If you do upgrade from firmware that actually has Arlo support it would be best to factory reset the R7000, update and then reset again, just to clear out old junk.
The Arlo support for the R7000 was intended to eliminate the need for the base station since whatever was needed was included in the R7000. It just needed firmware to support it. SInce it was never made to work right in conjunction with normal router needs, the Arlo part has been dropped. Now it's just a router and doesn't act like a base station.
End result is that there's no need to change routers since you're using the base. The only thing the R7000 added to the mix was the ability to act as a base. That's gone so it's just another router. Mine works fine with either the original or Pro bases.
To be clear to the original post, older R7000 firmware versions had Arlo support built in. It allowed the R7000 router to act as an Arlo base station in addition to being your main router. You did not have to use the supplied base station if you owned an R7000. I almost purchased the Arlo system at that time, but then found out that the later firmware releases removed this functionality and the Arlo base was/is now required to use the Arlo cameras. Since the Pro was right around the corner, I waited.
R7000's and some other NetGear routers (even with the older Arlo supporting firmware) suffer from a security flaw that allows attackers to take control of your router without need of your admin password. It was released to the public last week which guarantees attacks using this exploit will be occurring more frequently.
IMPORTANT: After visiting the above link your routers web interface will no longer be available to you, as it's been terminated. You can not login to your router with your admin password @192.168.1.1, and this means that nobody can use the exploit to assume control of your router either.
This quick link fix does not solve the problem, as the latest firmware (when released) will. In order to use your web interface to make changes to your router you will have to physically reboot it so the web server starts back up, and you can login again.
Once it reboots, you are again vulnerable to the exploit until either you use a future released firmware with the fix, the beta firmware that has the fix, or click the link above again to stop the web server after making any changes to your router.
I hope this helps others with this issue, and which solution is best for them. Know that stopping the web server is the least of your worries when wondering about what else one clever individual can make your router do instead:)
OK thanks everybody..I think I understand now..I had just bought the system and it was losing the internet connect to the base quite frequently..since I upgraded to the R7000 version that said it had arlo support it was consistently staying connected so I thought that was what was meant by arlo support. But it really meant bypassing the arlo base station and just connecting the cameras (which on the PRO version you cannot do) Perhaps my router firmware was too old hence I was losing connection to the base??
Thanks for all your help and all your suggestions also concerning the router hack. I will still look into getting a better router since we have so many cell phones but will try the latest 1.0.7.2 (or beta version) and report back.
Latest firmware is still vulnerable, so try the BETA (unless you want to disable the web server with the link until official stable is released) just remember to reboot if you need to access your router settings
Just FYI your cameras aren't connecting to the router itself, they are connecting to the base station, and the base station may not have the same range as your R7000. Look into an AC 1900 wifi extender .. something like this:
You plug it in, configure it, and it connects to your current R7000 wifi network, and retransmits the wireless signal (under a different wifi network name) wherever you plug it in (as long as it can still reach the original R7000 network) so if the signal is stronger on that name where you plug it in, just connect to that wireless network (same wifi password)
If you have mostly slower N devices,you may be able to get away with cheaper 12.99 dollar one, but I wouldn't connect multiple devices to it wifi, just the Arlo Base. Ex2700 (cheap one) maybe you can get a 3Mbps connection out of it. I think that's enough for the Arlo Base. The more expensive ones are faster speeds/faster processors to deal with the overhead of multiple devices connected to it @ac speed
@NETthisGEAR Are you saying that all those routers have built in support for Arlo? I know I can attach the Arlo hub to any router via ethernet, I'm asking about routers that would work with Arlo cameras but no Arlo hub. @jguerdat has mentioned that this no longer works as it originally did on R7000.
For personalized support specific to the Arlo products you own, access Support from within the Arlo iOS or Android App. Simply login to your Arlo App, go to Settings, Support, then select the Arlo product you would like support for.
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