NETGEAR Network Router PR2000 User Manual

NETGEAR Trek  
N300 Travel Router and Range  
Extender  
Model PR2000  
User Manual  
NETGEAR  
R
eset  
P
o w e r  
Internet
Internet  
W
iF i  
LAN  
U S B  
USB  
April 2014  
202-11296-02  
350 East Plumeria Drive  
San Jose, CA 95134  
USA  
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Contents  
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Trek N300 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000  
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Trek N300 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000  
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1.  
Hardware Setup  
1
Get to know your Trek  
The Trek N300 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000 provides you with an easy and  
secure way to set up a wireless local network with fast access to the Internet through a DSL or  
cable modem. You can connect to the Internet wirelessly through an existing router or a public  
WiFi hotspot. The Trek lets you block unsafe Internet content and applications, and protects the  
devices (computers, gaming consoles, and so on) that you connect to your local network.  
Note: For more information about the topics covered in this manual, visit the  
support website at support.netgear.com.  
If you have not already set up your new Trek using the installation guide that comes in the box,  
this chapter walks you through the hardware setup. Chapter 2, Get Started with NETGEAR  
genie, explains how to set up your Internet connection.  
This chapter contains the following sections:  
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Trek N300 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000  
Unpack Your Trek  
Open the box and remove the Trek and installation guide.  
NETGEAR  
R
eset  
Internet
LAN  
USB  
Trek N3000 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000  
Figure 1. Package contents  
Your box contains the following items:  
Trek N300 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000  
Installation guide with cabling and Trek setup instructions  
If any parts are incorrect, missing, or damaged, contact your NETGEAR dealer.  
Position Your Trek  
The Trek lets you access your network from virtually 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 Trek. For example, the  
thickness and number of walls the wireless signal passes through can limit the range.  
Position your Trek according to the following guidelines:  
Place your Trek 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 Trek is within reach of an AC power outlet and near Ethernet cables  
for wired computers.  
Place the Trek in an elevated location, minimizing the number walls and ceilings between  
the router and your other devices.  
Hardware Setup  
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Trek N300 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000  
Place the Trek away from electrical devices such as these:  
-
-
-
-
-
-
Ceiling fans  
Home security systems  
Microwaves  
Computers  
Base of a cordless phone  
2.4 GHz cordless phone  
Place the Trek away from large metal surfaces, large glass surfaces, insulated walls, and  
other surfaces such as these:  
-
-
-
-
-
-
Solid metal door  
Aluminum studs  
Fish tanks  
Mirrors  
Brick  
Concrete  
Prepare Your Trek  
To prepare your Trek for installation:  
1. Carefully peel off the protective film covering the end of your Trek.  
NETGEAR  
R
eset  
r  
Internet
LAN  
USB  
2. Place your Trek in an area suitable for installation (near a power outlet and accessible to the  
Ethernet cables for your wired computers).  
For more information about your choices of providing power to the Trek, see Power  
Hardware Setup  
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Trek N300 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000  
Get to Know Your NETGEAR Trek  
Locate the hardware features on your Trek.  
Internet Mode Switch  
Select your Internet mode.  
Internet  
via  
Internet  
via  
ired  
W
ower Oirfefles  
W
P
ired  
W
ower Oirfefles  
W
P
NETGEAR  
Figure 2. Internet via switch  
Put the switch in one of the following positions:  
Wired. Connect to the Internet with an Ethernet cable.  
Power Off. Turn off the Trek.  
Wireless. Connect to the Internet with a wireless link.  
Hardware Setup  
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Trek N300 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000  
Indicator LEDs  
Monitor the status of your Trek.  
Cover  
(rotate  
clockwise  
to open)  
ired  
W
ower
W
P
ower  
P
Indicator LEDs  
NETGEAR  
Internet  
iFi  
W
USB  
Figure 3. Indicator LEDs  
Monitor the status of your Trek using the following LEDs:  
Table 1. Status LEDs  
Power LED  
Green. The Trek is powered on.  
Off. The Trek is powered off.  
Internet LED  
Green. Either the Internet/LAN port is connected physically or a wireless channel is  
associated successfully.  
Blinking green. One of the following occurred:  
- The Reset button was pressed longer than five seconds.  
- A firmware upgrade is in progress.  
- The bandwidth limit was exceeded.  
Off. The Trek is not connected in either wired or wireless mode.  
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Trek N300 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000  
Table 1. Status LEDs (continued)  
WiFi LED  
Green. Either the LAN port or a wireless device is connected to the Trek.  
Off. No device is connected.  
USB LED  
Green. The USB drive is properly mounted.  
Off. No USB drive is detected.  
Connection Ports and Reset Button  
Connect or reset your Trek.  
TGEAR  
R
eset  
Internet/LAN  
Internet  
W
iF i  
LAN  
U S B  
Reset  
button  
USB  
Connection  
ports  
Figure 4. Connection ports and Reset button  
Connect or reset your Trek using the following items:  
Reset button. To reset the Trek to its factory settings, insert a paper clip into the Reset  
hole and hold it until the Internet LED blinks. See Factory Settings on page 139 for  
information about restoring factory settings.  
Internet/LAN port. When the Internet via switch is set to Wired, this port becomes an  
Internet port. When the switch is set to Wireless, this port becomes a LAN port for any  
Ethernet-enabled device.  
LAN port. A LAN port for any Ethernet-enabled device.  
USB port. A USB port for USB storage or a USB printer. When the Trek is plugged into  
the wall, the USB port can also be used as a cell phone charger.  
Hardware Setup  
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Power Inputs  
You can power the Trek with either AC current from a wall socket or a micro USB connection.  
Move the slide switch to the Power Off position before plugging the Trek in to the wall socket.  
Use either of the following methods to power your Trek:  
AC power connection. Fold out the power prongs and plug the unit into an AC wall  
outlet.  
W
P
i r e l e s  
o w e r O f f  
W
i r e d  
v i a I n t e r n e t  
ired  
W
ower
W
P
ower  
P
NETGEAR  
Internet  
iFi  
W
NETGEAR  
Power plug  
varies by county  
USB  
Figure 5. AC power connection  
Micro USB connection. Connect a micro USB cable to the unit and to a USB port on  
another device.  
W
P
i r e l e s  
o w e r O f f  
W
i r e d  
v i a I n t e r n e t  
NETGEAR  
Figure 6. Micro USB connection  
Hardware Setup  
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Trek N300 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000  
Antenna Orientation  
The WiFi antenna is inside the cover. Rotate the cover to position the antenna.  
d
e
r
Wi  
ower
W
P
NETGEAR  
R
NETGEAR  
e s e t  
I n t e r n e t / L A N  
ower  
P
R
L A N  
eset  
NETGEAR  
P
Internet  
iFi  
ow er  
Internet/LAN  
U S B  
Internet  
o w e r  
P
W
W
i
Internet  
iF i  
F
LAN  
U S B  
Wi  
USB  
USB  
USB  
Figure 7. Antenna orientation  
For best performance, keep the cover vertical when you use your Trek.  
Product Label  
The device login information (URL, user name, and password), SSID, and wireless password  
are printed on the product label.  
Device login information  
(URL, user name, and password)  
Preset wireless network name (SSID)  
and wireless network key (password)  
Figure 8. Product label  
Hardware Setup  
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Trek N300 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000  
Different Ways You Can Connect to the Internet  
Whether you use the Internet in the home or on the go (or both), the Trek is your solution to a  
better Internet experience.  
The Trek gives you a way to connect to the Internet while away from home.  
Do you want to connect your devices to the Internet at a WiFi hotspot? Connect your Trek to  
the WiFi hotspot and then connect your devices to your Trek. The Trek’s firewall protects  
your personal devices from known DoS attacks and port scans from the Internet. For more  
The Trek gives you a way to extend and expand the home network that you already have with  
your existing Internet connection. Use the Trek for any of the following situations:  
Add a WiFi router to your home network.  
Do you want to connect your wireless devices to your network? Convert your home  
network into a home WiFi network. For more information, see Internet Connection at  
Extend the range of your home WiFi network.  
Do you want to use your wireless devices at a greater distance from your WiFi router?  
Extend the range of your WiFi router with a WiFi range extender. For more information,  
Bridge the distance to your Internet-ready TV.  
Is your Internet-ready TV or other Ethernet-enabled device too far from your router for an  
Ethernet cable connection? Bridge the distance with a WiFi bridge. Examples of  
Ethernet-enabled devices include an Internet-ready TV, Blu-ray player, gaming console,  
and desktop or laptop computer. For more information, see WiFi Bridge Setup on  
For information about reconfiguring your Internet connection after initial setup, see Internet  
WiFi Connection at a Public Hotspot Setup  
Use the Trek as a WiFi connection to a wireless network in a WiFi hotspot zone. The Trek’s  
firewall protects your devices from known DoS attacks and port scans from the Internet.  
Hardware Setup  
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CAUTION: Most public WiFI hotspots offer no security. NETGEAR recommends that you  
do not send personal information over the Internet from your personal devices.  
R
NETGEAR  
e s e t  
I n t e r n e t / L A N  
L A N  
U S B  
o w e r  
P
I
t
r
n
e
t
iF  
W
USB  
(Optional) Connect a USB device to the USB port  
Figure 9. WiFi hotspot connection  
To connect to a public WiFi hotspot:  
1. Connect the Trek to a power source.  
For more information, see Power Inputs on page 12.  
2. Turn on power to the Trek by moving the Internet via switch from the Power Off position to  
the Wireless position.  
3. Rotate the Trek’s cover clockwise to orient the antenna.  
For more information, see Antenna Orientation on page 13.  
4. Connect your computer or wireless device to the Trek's SSID, or connect your computer or  
wireless device to the Trek’s LAN port with an Ethernet cable.  
5. Open a web browser on your computer, type www.routerlogin.net in the address field, and  
press the Enter key.  
If a login screen displays, enter admin for your user name and password for your  
password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. Then click the OK button.  
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The Wireless as WAN screen displays, which shows the available wireless networks.  
6. Make sure that the Extend my current wireless router's range check box is not selected.  
7. Select the wireless network that you want to connect to and enter the related security  
information for that wireless network.  
8. To be able to use these settings again without having to reenter them, select the To save a  
name for profile check box.  
9. In the field provided, enter a name for the profile.  
10. Click the Apply button.  
The Trek is connected to the WiFi hotspot after a two-minute setup process.  
11. (Optional) Connect your wireless devices to the Trek.  
12. (Optional) To use a USB device, connect it to the USB port of the Trek.  
A USB device can be a USB storage drive or a USB printer. When the Trek is plugged into  
the wall, the USB port can also be used as a cell phone charger. For more information,  
WiFi Range Extender Setup  
Use the Trek as a WiFi extender to connect your wireless devices that are outside the range  
of your existing WiFi router.  
NETGEAR recommends that you connect to the WiFi network of the Trek when a wireless  
device is in a dead zone where the connection to your existing WiFi router is poor or  
nonexistent.  
Hardware Setup  
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To use the Trek as a WiFi range extender:  
1. Place the Trek at an equal distance between your existing WiFi router and the wireless  
device that is located in the dead zone of your router.  
DO  
DON’T  
ed  
Wir  
Off e
ired  
Off  
wer  
Po Wire  
w
e
r
r
W
l
s
P
o
W
i
r
r
we  
Po  
we  
Po  
NETGEAR  
NET  
et  
Intern  
Internet  
G
EAR  
Fi  
Fi  
Wi  
Wi  
USB  
USB  
When possible, have your Trek in the same room with your existing router when you  
specify the settings of the Trek.  
2. Connect the Trek to a power source.  
For more information, see Power Inputs on page 12.  
3. Turn on power to the Trek by moving the Internet via switch from the Power Off position to  
the Wireless position.  
4. Rotate the Trek’s cover clockwise to orient the antenna.  
For more information, see Antenna Orientation on page 13.  
5. Connect your computer or wireless device to the Trek's SSID, or connect your computer or  
wireless device to the Trek’s LAN port with an Ethernet cable.  
6. Open a web browser on your computer, type www.routerlogin.net in the address field, and  
press the Enter key.  
If a login screen displays, enter admin for your user name and password for your  
password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. Then click the OK button.  
The Wireless as WAN screen displays, which shows the available wireless networks.  
7. Make sure that the Extend my current wireless router's range check box is selected.  
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8. Select the wireless network that you want to connect to and enter the related security  
information for that wireless network.  
9. To be able to use these settings again without having to reenter them, select the To save a  
name for profile check box.  
10. In the field provided, enter a name for the profile.  
11. Click the Apply button.  
The Trek is configured as a WiFi extender after a two-minute setup process.  
12. (Optional) Connect your wireless devices to the Trek.  
13. (Optional) To use a USB device, connect it to the USB port of the Trek.  
A USB device can be a USB storage drive or a USB printer. When the Trek is plugged into  
the wall, the USB port can also be used as a cell phone charger. For more information,  
Internet Connection at Home Setup  
Connect to the Internet with an Ethernet cable.  
ired  
W
ower Oi
W
P
ower  
P
NETGEAR  
Internet  
iFi  
W
USB  
DSL or  
cable modem  
(Optional) Connect a USB device to the USB port  
Figure 10. Wired WAN connection  
To connect to the Internet with an Ethernet cable:  
1. Connect an Ethernet cable between the Internet/LAN port of the Trek and the Ethernet  
port of your DSL or cable modem.  
2. Connect the Trek to a power source.  
For more information, see Power Inputs on page 12.  
3. Turn on power to the Trek by moving the Internet via switch from the Power Off position to  
the Wired position.  
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4. Connect your computer or wireless device to the Trek's SSID, or connect your computer or  
wireless device to the Trek’s LAN port with an Ethernet cable.  
5. Open a web browser on your computer, type www.routerlogin.net in the address field, and  
press the Enter key.  
If a login screen displays, enter admin for your user name and password for your  
password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. Then click the OK button.  
The Setup Wizard screen displays.  
6. Click the Next button and follow the prompts of the Setup Wizard.  
When you are done, the Congratulations screen displays.  
The Trek is connected to the Internet.  
7. (Optional) Connect your wireless devices to the Trek.  
8. (Optional) To use a USB device, connect it to the USB port of the Trek.  
A USB device can be a USB storage drive or a USB printer. When the Trek is plugged into  
the wall, the USB port can also be used as a cell phone charger. For more information,  
Hardware Setup  
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WiFi Bridge Setup  
Use the Ethernet ports on your Trek to connect up to two Ethernet-enabled devices  
wirelessly to your existing WiFi network. Examples of Ethernet-enabled devices include an  
Internet-ready TV, Blu-ray player, gaming console, and desktop or laptop computer.  
R e  
NETGEt AR  
s
e
I n t e r n e t / L A N  
L A N  
U S B  
o w e r  
P
I
t
r
n
e
t
iF  
W
USB  
Existing  
WiFi router  
(Optional) Connect a USB device to the USB port  
Figure 11. Two-port WiFi adapter  
Plug the Ethernet cable from your Ethernet-enabled device (such as a connected TV, Blu-ray  
player, or a gaming console) to one of the two Ethernet ports of the Trek and enjoy wireless  
connectivity.  
To use the Trek as a WiFi bridge:  
1. Connect the Trek to a power source.  
For more information, see Power Inputs on page 12.  
2. Turn on power to the Trek by moving the Internet via switch from the Power Off position to  
the Wireless position.  
3. Rotate the Trek’s cover clockwise to orient the antenna.  
For more information, see Antenna Orientation on page 13.  
4. Connect your computer or wireless device to the Trek's SSID, or connect your computer or  
wireless device to the Trek’s LAN port with an Ethernet cable.  
5. (Optional) Connect an Ethernet cable between the LAN port of the Trek and the Ethernet  
port of another device.  
6. Open a web browser on your computer, type www.routerlogin.net in the address field, and  
press the Enter key.  
If a login screen displays, enter admin for your user name and password for your  
password. The user name and password are case-sensitive. Then click the OK button.  
Hardware Setup  
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The Wireless as WAN screen displays, which shows the available wireless networks.  
7. Make sure that the Extend my current wireless router's range check box is selected.  
8. Select the wireless network that you want to connect to and enter the related security  
information for that wireless network.  
9. (Optional) To be able to use these settings again without having to reenter them, select the  
To save a name for profile check box.  
10. In the field provided, enter a name for the profile.  
11. Click the Apply button.  
The Trek is configured as a WiFi bridge after a two-minute setup process.  
12. (Optional) Connect your wireless devices to the Trek.  
13. (Optional) To use a USB device, connect it to the USB port of the Trek.  
A USB device can be a USB storage drive or a USB printer. When the Trek is plugged into  
the wall, the USB port can also be used as a cell phone charger. For more information,  
Hardware Setup  
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2.  
Get Started with NETGEAR genie  
2
Connect to the Trek  
This chapter explains how to use NETGEAR genie to set up your Trek after you complete  
cabling as described in the installation guide.  
The chapter contains the following sections:  
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Trek Setup Preparation  
You can set up your Trek with the NETGEAR genie automatically, or you can use the genie  
menus and screens to set up your Trek manually. However, before you start the setup  
process, you need to have your ISP information on hand and make sure the laptops,  
computers, and other devices in the network have the required settings.  
Use Standard TCP/IP Properties for DHCP  
If you set up your computer to use a static IP address, you must change the settings so that it  
uses Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP).  
Gather ISP Information  
For DSL broadband service, when your Internet service starts, your Internet service provider  
(ISP) typically gives you all of the information needed to connect to the Internet. You might  
need this information to set up the Trek to use your Internet service. If you cannot locate this  
information, ask your ISP to provide it. When your Internet connection is working, you no  
longer need to launch the ISP login program on your computer to access the Internet. When  
you start an Internet application, your Trek automatically logs you in. You might need the  
following information to set up your Trek:  
The ISP configuration information for your DSL account  
ISP login name and password  
Fixed or static IP address settings (special deployment by ISP)  
Wireless Devices and Security Settings  
Make sure that the wireless device or computer that you are using supports WPA or WPA2  
wireless security, which is the wireless security supported by the Trek. For information about  
the Trek’s preconfigured security settings, see Basic Wireless Settings on page 40.  
Types of Logins and Access  
Different types of logins have different purposes. It is important that you understand the  
difference so that you know which login to use when.  
Types of logins:  
Trek login. The login that your ISP provided logs you in to the Trek interface from  
NETGEAR genie. See Use NETGEAR genie After Installation on page 25 for details  
about this login.  
ISP login. This logs you in to your Internet service. Your service provider gave you this  
login information in a letter or some other way. If you cannot find this login information,  
contact your service provider.  
Get Started with NETGEAR genie  
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Trek N300 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000  
Wireless network key or password. Your Trek is preset with a unique wireless network  
name (SSID) and password for wireless access. This information is on the product label.  
NETGEAR genie Setup  
NETGEAR genie runs on any computer or device with a web browser. It is the easiest way to  
set up the Trek because it automates many of the steps and verifies that those steps have  
been successfully completed. It takes about 15 minutes to complete.  
To use NETGEAR genie to set up your Trek:  
1. Turn on the Trek by moving the Internet via switch to one of the following positions:  
Wired. For an Internet connection with an Ethernet cable  
Wireless. For a wireless Internet connection  
For information about the Internet via switch, see Internet Mode Switch on page 9.  
2. Make sure that your Trek is cabled correctly.  
If you want to connect to the Internet with an Ethernet cable, make sure that you have  
connected an Ethernet cable between the Internet/LAN port of the Trek and the Ethernet  
port of your DSL or cable modem. For more information, see Internet Connection at  
3. Make sure that your device is connected with an Ethernet cable to your Trek.  
You can also connect your device wirelessly to your Trek. For more information, see Add  
4. Launch your Internet browser in one of the following ways.  
The first time you set up the Internet connection for your Trek, the browser  
automatically goes to www.routerlogin.net, and the NETGEAR genie screen  
displays.  
If you already used the NETGEAR genie, type www.routerlogin.net in the address  
field for your browser to display the NETGEAR genie screen. See Use NETGEAR  
5. Follow the instructions on the screen to complete the NETGEAR genie setup.  
NETGEAR genie guides you through connecting the Trek to the Internet. For more  
6. If the browser cannot display the web page, do the following.  
Make sure that the computer is connected to the LAN Ethernet port or wirelessly to  
the Trek.  
Make sure that the Trek is running. If it is, its WiFi LED is lit.  
Close and reopen the browser to make sure that the browser does not cache the  
previous page.  
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Browse to www.routerlogin.net.  
If the computer is set to a static or fixed IP address (this situation is uncommon),  
change it to obtain an IP address automatically from the Trek.  
7. If the Trek does not connect to the Internet, do the following:  
To be sure that you have selected the correct options and typed everything correctly,  
review the Trek’s settings.  
Contact your ISP to verify that you have the correct configuration information for your  
main Internet connection.  
Use NETGEAR genie After Installation  
When you first set up your Trek, NETGEAR genie automatically starts when you launch an  
Internet browser on a computer that is connected to the Trek. You can use NETGEAR genie  
again to view or change settings for the Trek.  
To view or change the settings for the Trek:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
admin  
********  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
Note: The Trek user name and password are different from the user name  
and password for logging in to your Internet connection. For more  
4. Click the OK button.  
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Trek N300 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000  
5. The BASIC Home screen displays.  
Upgrade the Trek Firmware  
When you set up your Trek and are connected to the Internet, the Trek automatically checks  
for you to see if newer firmware is available. If it is, a message is displayed on the top of the  
screen. For more information about upgrading firmware, see Update the Trek Firmware on  
Click the message when it displays, and click the Yes button to upgrade the Trek with the  
latest firmware. After the upgrade, the Trek restarts.  
CAUTION:  
Do not try to go online, turn off the Trek, shut down the computer, or do  
anything else to the Trek until the Trek finishes restarting and the Power  
LED has stopped blinking for several seconds.  
Change the Password  
The default password that you use to log in to the Trek is password. NETGEAR recommends  
that you change this default password to a secure password.  
Changing the default password is not the same as changing the password for wireless  
access. The label on your Trek shows your unique wireless network name (SSID) and the  
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passphrase (also referred to as the wireless network password or network key) for wireless  
access (see Product Label on page 13).  
To change the default password that you use to log in to the Trek:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Administration > Set Password.  
6. Type the old password and type the new password twice in the fields on this screen.  
7. If you want to be able to recover the password, select the Enable Password Recovery  
check box.  
For more information, see Password Recovery on page 27.  
8. Click the Apply button.  
Password Recovery  
NETGEAR recommends that you enable password recovery if you change the password for  
the Trek’s user name of admin. Then you have an easy way to recover the password if it is  
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forgotten. This recovery process is supported in Internet Explorer, Firefox, and Chrome  
browsers, but not in the Safari browser.  
To set up password recovery:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Administration > Set Password.  
6. Select the Enable Password Recovery check box.  
7. Select two security questions and provide answers to them.  
8. Click the Apply button.  
To recover your password:  
1. In the address field of your browser, type www.routerlogin.net.  
A login screen displays.  
2. Click the Cancel button.  
If password recovery is enabled, you are prompted to enter the serial number of the Trek.  
The serial number is on the product label.  
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3. Enter the serial number of the Trek.  
4. Click the Continue button.  
A screen displays requesting the answers to your security questions.  
5. Enter the saved answers to your security questions.  
6. Click the Continue button.  
A screen displays your recovered password.  
7. Click the Login again button.  
A login screen displays.  
8. With your recovered password, log in to the Trek.  
Add Wireless Devices or Computers to Your Trek  
Connect wireless devices such as desktops, laptops, smartphones, and tablets to your Trek.  
You can connect these WiFi devices either manually or using the WPS (Wi-Fi Protected  
Setup) method.  
For best wireless connection performance, rotate the Trek’s cover clockwise to position its  
antenna properly. For more information, see Antenna Orientation on page 13.  
Manual Method  
To connect WiFi devices manually to your Trek:  
1. From your wireless device, view the available wireless networks.  
For more information, see the manual that came with your device.  
2. From the list of available wireless networks, select the wireless network name (SSID) of the  
Trek.  
The SSID is printed on the product label.  
3. From your wireless device, initiate a wireless connection.  
For more information, see the manual that came with your device.  
4. When prompted by your wireless device, enter the wireless network key (password) of the  
Trek.  
The password is printed on the product label.  
5. From the screen of your wireless device, click the appropriate button to continue the  
connection procedure.  
You are connected wirelessly to the Trek.  
6. Repeat Step 1 through Step 5 for each wireless device that you want to connect to the Trek.  
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Wi-Fi Protected Setup Method  
Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) is a standard for easily adding computers and other devices to  
a home network while maintaining security. To use WPS, make sure that all wireless devices  
to be connected to the network are Wi-Fi certified and support WPS. During the connection  
process, the client gets the security settings from the Trek so that every device in the network  
has the same security settings.  
To connect WiFi devices to your Trek with WPS:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Click ADVANCED > WPS Wizard.  
6. Click the Next button.  
7. Select one of the following radio buttons:  
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Push Button (recommended). Click the  
button.  
Within two minutes, go to the wireless device and press its WPS button to join the  
network without entering a password.  
PIN Number. Select the PIN Number radio button and enter the wireless device’s  
security PIN in the field that displays.  
Within two minutes, go to the wireless device and use its WPS software to join the  
network without entering a password. For more information, see the manual that  
came with your device.  
The Trek attempts to add the WPS-capable wireless device. The WiFi LED on the Trek  
blinks green. When the Trek establishes a WPS connection, the LED is solid green and  
the Trek WPS screen displays a confirmation message.  
8. Repeat Step 7 for each wireless device that you want to connect to the Trek.  
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NETGEAR genie App and Mobile genie App  
The genie app is the easy dashboard for managing, monitoring, and repairing your home  
network. For information about the genie apps, see the NETGEAR genie App User Manual.  
Retrieve wireless password  
About genie  
Language  
Menu  
Dashboard  
(Click to  
view  
details)  
Support  
Figure 12. genie app dashboard  
The genie app can help you with the following:  
Automatically repair common wireless network problems.  
Have easy access to router features like Live Parental Controls, guest access, Internet  
traffic meter, speed test, and more.  
The genie mobile app works on your iPhone, iPad, or Android phone:  
Phone status  
Information about  
Log in to the router  
genie mobile app  
and the connected  
router  
Search NETGEAR  
support  
Figure 13. genie mobile app home screen  
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3.  
genie BASIC Settings  
3
Your Internet connection and network  
This chapter explains the basic features of the Trek.  
The chapter contains the following sections:  
ReadySHARE allows you to enhance your local network with the Trek’s USB port. For more  
information, see Chapter 5, USB Port.  
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Internet Setup  
The Internet setup procedure you must use depends on how you want to connect to the  
Internet:  
Wired WAN connection. For an Internet connection with an Ethernet cable, use a wired  
WAN connection.  
The router mode allows your Trek to work as a router between your DSL or cable modem  
and your local network. For more information, see Wired WAN Connection Router Mode  
The wireless AP mode allows your Trek to work as a standalone wireless access point on  
your existing router. For more information, see Wired WAN Connection Wireless AP  
Wireless WAN connection. For an Internet connection with a wireless link, use a  
wireless WAN connection.  
The WiFi mode allows your Trek to connect to the Internet with a WiFi connection. For  
For information about setting up the hardware, see Different Ways You Can Connect to the  
Wired WAN Connection Router Mode  
You can view or change basic ISP information.  
You can use the Setup Wizard to detect the Internet connection and automatically set up the  
To view or change the Internet setup:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
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5. Select BASIC > Internet.  
Scroll to view  
more settings  
6. Clear the Enable AP Mode check box.  
The fields that display in the Internet Setup screen depend on whether your Internet  
connection requires a login.  
7. Select the Save as profile check box.  
If you want to use your Trek in more than one type of Internet connection, a saved profile  
lets you make connections more quickly.  
8. In the field provided, enter a name for the profile.  
Your saved profiles display on the Profile Settings screen after you click the Apply  
button. For more information, see Profile Settings on page 45.  
9. Under Does your Internet connection require a login?, select one of the following radio  
buttons:  
Yes. Select the encapsulation method and enter the login name. If you want to  
change the login time-out, enter a new value in minutes.  
No. Enter the account and domain names, only if needed.  
These fields display when no login is required:  
Account Name (If required). Enter the account name provided by your ISP. This  
might also be called the host name.  
Domain Name (If required). Enter the domain name provided by your ISP.  
These fields display when your ISP requires a login:  
Internet Service Provider. Select PPPoE, L2TP, or PPTP.  
Login. The login name provided by your ISP. This login name is often an email  
address.  
Password. The password that you use to log in to your ISP.  
Service Name (if Required). If your ISP provided a service name, enter it here.  
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Connection Mode. Select Always On, Dial on Demand, or Manually Connect.  
Idle Timeout (In minutes). If you want to change the login time-out, enter a new  
value in minutes. This setting determines how long the Trek keeps the Internet  
connection active when there is no Internet activity from the LAN. A value of 0 (zero)  
means never log out.  
10. Enter the settings for the IP address and DNS server.  
The default settings usually work fine. If you have problems with your connection, check  
the following ISP settings:  
Internet IP Address. 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’s gateway to which your  
Trek will connect.  
Domain Name Server (DNS) Address. The DNS server is used to look up site  
addresses based on their names. 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 radio button. Enter the IP address of your ISP’s primary DNS server. If  
a secondary DNS server address is available, enter it also.  
Router MAC Address. The Ethernet MAC address that the Trek uses on the Internet  
port. Some ISPs register the MAC address of the network interface card in your  
computer when your account is first opened. They accept traffic only from the MAC  
address of that computer. This feature allows your Trek to use your computer’s MAC  
address (also called cloning). Select one of the following radio buttons:  
-
-
Use Default Address. Use the default MAC address.  
Use Computer MAC Address. The Trek 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 9,  
Wired WAN Connection Wireless AP Mode  
The wireless AP mode allows this device to work as a standalone wireless access point on  
your existing network. You can view or change basic ISP information.  
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Use the Setup Wizard to detect the Internet connection and automatically set up the Trek.  
To view or change the Internet setup:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select BASIC > Internet.  
Scroll to view  
more settings  
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6. Select the Enable AP Mode check box.  
7. Select the Save as profile check box.  
If you want to use your Trek in more than one type of Internet connection, a saved profile  
lets you make connections more quickly.  
8. In the field provided, enter a name for the profile.  
Your saved profiles display on the Profile Settings screen after you click the Apply  
button. For more information, see Profile Settings on page 45.  
9. (Optional) Select the Enable fixed IP settings on this device check box.  
NETGEAR recommends that you do not use this feature.  
10. In the fields provided, enter the following information about your Internet connection:  
IP Address. The IP address that your ISP assigned.  
IP Subnet Mask. The IP subnet mask that your ISP assigned.  
Gateway IP Address. The gateway IP address that your ISP assigned. The gateway  
IP address is the ISP’s gateway to which your Trek will connect.  
Primary DNS. The IP address of your ISP’s primary DNS server.  
Secondary DNS. The IP address of your ISP’s secondary DNS server.  
11. Click the Apply button.  
Your settings are saved.  
12. If you lose the Wireless AP screen, close and restart your web browser.  
The Trek changes to a new IP address that is assigned by your existing router and this  
screen might not display.  
13. Enter www.routerlogin.net and log in again.  
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Wireless WAN Connection WiFi Mode  
You can view or change basic ISP information.  
Use the Setup Wizard to detect the Internet connection and automatically set up the Trek.  
To view or change the Internet setup:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select BASIC > Internet.  
The Wireless as WAN screen displays the WiFi networks that are available in your area.  
6. If you want to connect to a public WiFi network, select the Extend my current wireless  
router's range check box.  
If you want to connect to your home WiFi network, clear the Extend my current wireless  
router's range check box.  
7. Select the radio button that is next to the name (SSID) of the WiFi network that you want to  
connect to.  
The security type and passphrase fields for the WiFi network display on the right side of  
the screen.  
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8. In the field provided, enter the passphrase.  
9. Select the To save a name for profile check box.  
If you want to use your Trek in more than one type of Internet connection, a saved profile  
lets you make connections more quickly.  
10. In the field provided, enter a name for the profile.  
Your saved profiles display on the Profile Settings screen after you click the Apply  
button. For more information, see Profile Settings on page 45.  
11. Click the Apply button.  
Your settings are saved.  
12. To update the list of available WiFi networks, click the Refresh button.  
Basic Wireless Settings  
You can view or configure the wireless network setup.  
The Trek 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.  
You can find the preset SSID and password on the label of the unit.  
Note: The preset SSID and password are uniquely generated for every  
device to protect and maximize your wireless security.  
NETGEAR recommends that you do not change your preset security settings. If you do  
decide to change your preset security settings, make a note of the new settings and store it 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 Trek.  
To view or change basic wireless settings:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
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5. Select BASIC > Wireless.  
6. (Optional) Change the following wireless settings as needed.  
Region. The location where the Trek is used. Select from the countries in the list. In  
Asia, the region is fixed to Asia and is not changeable.  
Name (SSID). The SSID is also known as the wireless network name. Enter a  
32-character (maximum) name in this field. This field is case-sensitive. The default  
SSID is randomly generated, and NETGEAR recommends that you do not change  
this setting.  
Channel. The wireless channel the gateway uses. Enter a value from 1 through 13.  
(For products in the North America market, only Channels 1 through 11 can be  
operated.) 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 radio frequency channels to reduce interference. The recommended channel  
spacing between adjacent access points is five channels (for example, use Channels  
1 and 6, or 6 and 11).  
The channel can be changed only when the Trek is operating in wired WAN mode.  
For more information about connection modes, see Internet Setup on page 34.  
Mode. Up to 300 Mbps is the default setting, which allows 802.11n and 802.11g  
wireless devices to join the network. The other settings are Up to 54 Mbps and Up to  
145 Mbps.  
Enable SSID Broadcast. This feature allows the Trek to broadcast its SSID so  
wireless stations can see this wireless name (SSID) in their scanned network lists.  
This check box is selected by default. To turn off the SSID broadcast, clear this check  
box.  
Enable Wireless Isolation. If this check box is selected, wireless clients (computers  
or wireless devices) that join the network can use the Internet, but cannot access  
each other or access Ethernet devices on the network.  
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7. (Optional) Change the security settings as needed.  
8. Click the Apply button.  
Your settings are saved.  
If you were connected wirelessly to the router and you changed the SSID or wireless  
security, you are disconnected from the network.  
9. If you changed the settings, make sure that you can connect wirelessly to the network with  
its new settings.  
If you cannot connect wirelessly, check the following:  
Is your computer or wireless device connected to another wireless 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.  
Change the Wireless Security Option  
A security option is the type of security protocol applied to your wireless network. The  
security protocol in force encrypts data transmissions and ensures that only trusted devices  
receive authorization to connect to your network. Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) has several  
options including pre-shared key (PSK) encryption.  
Note: The Trek comes with unique preset wireless security. These settings  
are on the product label. NETGEAR recommends that you use  
preset security so that you can refer to the label if you forget the  
WiFi password. However, you can change the security option and  
passphrase.  
WPA encryption is built into all hardware that has the Wi-Fi-certified seal. This seal means  
that the product is authorized by the Wi-Fi Alliance (www.wi-fi.org/) because it complies with  
the worldwide single standard for high-speed wireless local area networking.  
WPA uses a passphrase for authentication and to generate the initial data encryption keys.  
Then it dynamically varies the encryption key. WPA-PSK uses Temporal Key Integrity  
Protocol (TKIP) data encryption, implements most of the IEEE 802.11i standard, and works  
with all wireless network interface cards, but not all wireless access points.  
WPA2-PSK is stronger than WPA-PSK. It is advertised to be theoretically indecipherable due  
to the greater degree of randomness in encryption keys that it generates. WPA2-PSK gets  
higher speed because it is implemented through hardware; WPA-PSK is implemented  
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through software. WPA2-PSK uses a passphrase to authenticate and generate the initial data  
encryption keys. Then it dynamically varies the encryption key.  
WPS-PSK + WPA2-PSK mixed mode can provide broader support for all wireless clients.  
WPA2-PSK clients get higher speed and security, and WPA-PSK clients get decent speed  
and security. For help with WPA settings on your wireless computer or device, see the  
instructions that came with your product.  
To change the WPA settings:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select BASIC > Wireless.  
6. Under Security Options, select the WPA option that you want.  
NETGEAR recommends that you do not disable security.  
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7. In the Passphrase field that displays when you select a WPA security option, enter the  
network key (password) that you want to use.  
It is a text string from 8 to 63 characters.  
8. Write down the new password and keep it in a secure place for future reference.  
9. Click the Apply button.  
Your changes are saved.  
Attached Devices  
You can view all computers or devices that are currently connected to your network.  
To view the attached devices:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select BASIC > Attached Devices.  
Wired devices are connected to the Trek with Ethernet cables. Wireless devices have  
joined the wireless network. The following information displays:  
# (number). The order in which the device joined the network.  
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IP Address. The IP address that the Trek assigned to this device when it joined the  
network. This number can change if a device is disconnected and rejoins the network.  
MAC Address. The unique MAC address for each device does not change. The MAC  
address is typically shown on the product label.  
Device Name. If the device name is known, it is shown here.  
6. To update this screen, click the Refresh button.  
To secure your Trek against WiFi intruders, restrict wireless access. For more information,  
Profile Settings  
If you want to use your Trek in more than one type of Internet connection, a saved profile lets  
you make your connections more quickly. Save the profiles when you configure an Internet  
connection. Up to 10 profiles can be saved. For more information, see Internet Setup on  
page 34. You can view or delete your profiles after you saved them.  
To view or delete the saved profile settings:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
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5. Select BASIC > Profile Settings.  
Your saved Internet connection profiles are displayed.  
6. To delete a profile, select the radio button that is next to the profile that you want to delete  
and click the Delete Profile button.  
The profile is deleted.  
7. Repeat Step 6 for each profile that you want to delete.  
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4.  
genie ADVANCED Home  
4
Specify custom settings  
This chapter explains the advanced features of the Trek.  
The chapter contains the following sections:  
Some selections on the ADVANCED Home screen are described in separate chapters:  
Internet Setup. This is a shortcut to the same Internet Setup screen that you can access  
from the dashboard on the BASIC Home screen. See Internet Setup on page 34.  
Wireless Setup. This is a shortcut to the same Wireless Setup screen that you can  
USB Storage. See Chapter 5, USB Port.  
Security. See Chapter 6, Security.  
Administration. See Chapter 7, Administration.  
Advanced Setup. See Chapter 8, Advanced Settings.  
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Setup Wizard  
The NETGEAR genie installation process is launched the first time you set up the Trek. After  
setting up the Trek the first time, if you want to perform this task again, you can run Setup  
Wizard from the ADVANCED tab of the genie.  
To launch the Setup Wizard:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Setup Wizard.  
6. Select either the Yes or No, I want to configure the router myself radio button.  
If you select the No button, you are taken to the Internet Setup screen. For more  
information, see Internet Setup on page 34.  
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7. If you selected the Yes button, click the Next button.  
The Setup Wizard searches your Internet connection for servers and protocols to  
determine your ISP configuration.  
8. Click the Take me to the Internet button.  
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WAN Setup  
You can configure a DMZ (demilitarized zone) server, change the maximum transmit unit  
(MTU) size, and enable the Trek to respond to a ping on the WAN (Internet) port. The Trek  
does not support a VPN endpoint, but it allows traffic from VPN endpoints to pass through.  
To change the WAN settings:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Setup > WAN Setup.  
6. Enter 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, Teardrop  
Attack, UDP Flood, ARP Attack, Spoofing ICMP, Null Scan, and many others. By  
default, this check box is cleared.  
Default DMZ Server. A demilitarized zone (DMZ) server can be helpful when you  
play online games and use videoconferencing. Be careful when you use this feature  
because it makes the firewall security less effective. For more information, see  
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Respond to Ping on Internet Port. If you want the Trek to respond to a ping from the  
Internet, select this check box. By default, this check box is cleared. Use this feature  
only as a diagnostic tool because it allows your Trek to be discovered. Do not select  
this check box unless you have a specific reason.  
MTU Size (in bytes). The normal MTU (maximum transmit unit) value for most  
Ethernet networks is 1500 bytes, or 1492 bytes for PPPoE connections. For some  
ISPs, you might need to reduce the MTU. This change is rarely required. Do not make  
this change unless you are sure that it is necessary for your ISP connection. For more  
information, see Change the MTU Size on page 53.  
NAT Filtering. Network Address Translation (NAT) determines how the Trek  
processes inbound traffic:  
-
Secured NAT provides a secured firewall to protect the computers on the LAN  
from attacks from the Internet, but might prevent some Internet games,  
point-to-point applications, or multimedia applications from functioning. By default,  
the Secured radio button is selected.  
-
Open NAT provides a much less secured firewall, but allows almost all Internet  
applications to function.  
Disable SIP ALG. Some Voice over IP (VoIP) applications do not function well with  
the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Application Layer Gateway (ALG). Selecting the  
check box to turn off the SIP ALG might enable connected VoIP devices to create and  
accept a VoIP call through the Trek. By default, this check box is cleared.  
Disable IGMP Proxying. IGMP proxying allows computers on the LAN to receive the  
multicast traffic they are subscribed to from the Internet. By default, this check box is  
selected, and the IGMP proxy is disabled, preventing multicast traffic from the Internet  
to the LAN. Clear the Disable IGMP Proxying check box to allow multicast traffic  
from the Internet to the LAN.  
VPN Passthrough. The Trek supports VPN passthrough for IPSec, PPTP, and L2TP.  
-
-
-
IPSec Passthrough. To enable or disable IPSec passthrough, select the Enable  
or Disabled radio button.  
PPTP Passthrough. To enable or disable PPTP passthrough, select the Enable  
or Disabled radio button.  
L2TP Passthrough. To enable or disable L2TP passthrough, select the Enable  
or Disabled radio button.  
7. Click the Apply button.  
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 Trek 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 that computer’s IP address is entered as the  
default DMZ server.  
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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 Trek discards incoming traffic from the Internet unless the traffic is a response to one of  
your local computers. Instead of discarding this traffic, you can forward it to one computer on  
your network. This computer is called the default DMZ server.  
To set up a default DMZ server:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Setup > WAN Setup.  
6. Select the Default DMZ Server check box.  
7. Type the IP address.  
8. Click the Apply button.  
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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 any 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 just the default value, and changing  
the value might fix one problem but cause another.  
WARNING:  
An incorrect MTU setting can cause Internet communication  
problems such as the inability to access certain websites, frames  
within websites, secure login pages, or FTP or POP servers.  
Leave the MTU unchanged unless one of these situations occurs:  
You have problems connecting to your ISP or other Internet service, and 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 Online’s 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.  
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  
Application  
1500  
The largest Ethernet packet size. This value is the typical setting for non-PPPoE, non-VPN  
connections, and is the default value for NETGEAR Treks, adapters, and switches.  
1492  
1472  
1468  
1460  
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.  
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Table 2. Common MTU sizes (continued)  
MTU  
1436  
1400  
576  
Application  
Used in PPTP environments or with VPN.  
Maximum size for AOL DSL.  
Typical value to connect to dial-up ISPs.  
To change the MTU size:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Setup > WAN Setup.  
6. In the MTU Size field, enter a new size from 64 through 1500.  
7. Click the Apply button.  
LAN Setup  
You can configure LAN IP services such as Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP)  
and Routing Information Protocol (RIP).  
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The Trek is shipped preconfigured to use private IP addresses on the LAN side and to act as  
a DHCP server. The Trek’s default LAN IP configuration includes the following settings:  
LAN IP address. 192.168.168.1  
Subnet mask. 255.255.255.0  
These addresses are part of the designated private address range for use in private networks  
and should be suitable for most applications. If your network requires the use of a different IP  
addressing scheme, make the changes in the LAN Setup screen.  
Note: If you change the LAN IP address of the Trek while connected  
through the browser, you are disconnected. You must open a new  
connection to the new IP address and log in again.  
To change the LAN settings:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Setup > LAN Setup.  
6. Enter the following settings:  
IP Address. The LAN IP address of the Trek (by default, 192.168.168.1).  
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IP Subnet Mask. The LAN subnet mask of the Trek (by default, 255.255.255.0).  
Combined with the IP address, the IP subnet mask allows a device to know which  
other addresses are local to it, and which must be reached through a gateway or  
router.  
RIP Direction. Router Information Protocol (RIP) enables a router to exchange  
routing information with other routers. This setting controls how the Trek sends and  
receives RIP packets. Both is the default setting. With the Both or Out Only setting,  
the Trek broadcasts its routing table periodically. With the Both or In Only setting, the  
Trek incorporates the RIP information that it receives.  
RIP Version. This setting controls the format and the broadcasting method of the RIP  
packets that the Trek sends. It recognizes both formats when receiving. By default,  
the RIP function is disabled. Four RIP versions exist:  
-
RIP-1 is universally supported. It is adequate for most networks, unless you have  
an unusual network setup.  
-
RIP-2 carries more information. Both RIP-2B and RIP-2M send the routing data in  
RIP-2 format.  
-
-
RIP-2B uses subnet broadcasting.  
RIP-2M uses multicasting.  
7. To set your computers’ IP addresses manually, clear the Use Router as DHCP Server  
check box.  
NETGEAR recommends that you do not do this. For more information, see Use the Trek  
8. To reserve an IP address for a computer or device on the LAN, in the Address Reservation  
section, click the Add button.  
For more information, see Set Up Address Reservation on page 58.  
9. Click the Apply button.  
Use the Trek as a DHCP Server  
By default, the Trek functions as a DHCP server, allowing it to assign IP, DNS server, and  
default gateway addresses to all computers connected to the Trek’s LAN. The assigned  
default gateway address is the LAN IP address of the Trek. The Trek assigns IP addresses to  
the attached computers from a pool of addresses specified in this screen. Each pool address  
is tested before it is assigned to avoid duplicate addresses on the LAN. For most  
applications, the default DHCP and TCP/IP settings of the Trek are satisfactory.  
You can specify the pool of IP addresses for assignment by setting the starting IP address  
and ending IP address. These addresses must be part of the same IP address subnet as the  
Trek’s LAN IP address. Using the default addressing scheme, define a range between  
192.168.168.2 and 192.168.168.200, although you might want to save part of the range for  
devices with fixed addresses.  
The Trek delivers the following parameters to any LAN device that requests DHCP:  
An IP address from the range that you defined  
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Subnet mask  
Gateway IP address (the Trek’s LAN IP address)  
DNS server address  
You can use another device on your network as the DHCP server or you can manually  
configure the network settings of all of your computers and devices.  
To disable the DHCP server feature:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Setup > LAN Setup.  
6. Clear the Use Router as DHCP Server check box.  
7. Click the Apply button.  
If the DHCP service is not enabled on the Trek and no other DHCP server is available on  
your network, you must set your computers’ IP addresses manually or your computers  
cannot access the Trek.  
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Set Up Address Reservation  
When you specify a reserved IP address for a computer or device on the LAN, that computer  
or device always receives the same IP address each time it accesses the Trek’s DHCP  
server. Assign reserved IP addresses to computers or servers that require permanent IP  
settings.  
To reserve an IP address:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Setup > LAN Setup.  
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6. In the Address Reservation section, click the Add button.  
7. In the IP Address field, type the IP address to assign to the computer or server.  
Choose an IP address from the Trek’s LAN subnet, such as 192.168.168.x, where x is  
between 2 and 200.  
8. 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.  
9. Click the Apply button.  
The reserved address is entered in the table.  
The reserved address is not assigned until the next time the computer contacts the Trek’s  
DHCP server. Reboot the computer or access its IP configuration and force a DHCP  
release and renew.  
To edit or delete a reserved address entry:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
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5. Select ADVANCED > Setup > LAN Setup.  
6. In the Address Reservation table, select the radio button next to the address that you want  
to edit or delete, and do one of the following:  
To delete a reserved address entry, click the Delete button.  
The address is removed from the table.  
To edit a reserved address entry, click the Edit button.  
The Address Reservation screen displays.  
a. Edit the address information.  
b. Click the Apply button.  
Quality of Service Setup  
You can use Quality of Service (QoS) to prioritize some types of traffic ahead of others. The  
Trek can provide QoS prioritization over the wireless link and on the Internet connection.  
Wi-Fi Multimedia Quality of Service for Wireless Traffic  
The Trek supports Wi-Fi Multimedia Quality of Service (WMM QoS) to prioritize wireless  
voice and video traffic over the wireless link. 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. WMM QoS is enabled by default.  
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Quality of Service Priority Rules and Internet Access  
You can give prioritized Internet access to the following types of traffic:  
Specific applications  
Specific online games  
Individual Ethernet LAN ports of the Trek  
A specific device by MAC address  
To specify prioritization of traffic, you need to create a policy for the type of traffic and add the  
policy to the QoS Policy table in the QoS Setup screen. For convenience, the QoS Policy  
table lists many common applications and online games that can benefit from QoS handling.  
By default, QoS is disabled for Internet traffic. The default QoS rules and any custom QoS  
rules that you created are not activated, and no traffic is prioritized.  
To set up QoS:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Setup > QoS Setup.  
6. Select the Turn Internet Access QoS On check box.  
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7. To limit the bandwidth that is available for traffic from the Trek to the Internet, select the  
Turn Bandwidth Control On check box.  
8. Select the Automatically check Internet Uplink bandwidth radio button.  
9. Click the Check button.  
The Trek detects the available uplink bandwidth. After about one minute, the available  
bandwidth displays on the screen. This information can help you to determine the  
maximum bandwidth setting that you want to allow.  
10. Select the Uplink bandwidth radio button.  
11. Enter the maximum bandwidth that you want to allow, and select either Kbps or Mbps.  
12. To manage the preconfigured and custom QoS rules, click the Set Up QoS rule button.  
Scroll down  
All preconfigured QoS rules are displayed in a table, along with their priority (Highest,  
High, Normal, or Low) and a description.  
13. Select the radio button next to the QoS policy that you want to and click the Delete button.  
WARNING:  
If you click the Delete All button, all preconfigured and custom QoS  
rules are deleted.  
14. Select the radio button next to the QoS policy that you want to edit and click the Edit button.  
The QoS - Priority Rules screen displays. Edit the information you want to change.  
15. When you are done, on the QoS - Priority Rules screen, click the Apply button.  
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Your changes are saved in the table on the QoS Setup screen.  
16. To add a priority rule, click the Add Priority Rule button.  
17. To create a QoS rule for an application or online game, in the Priority Category list, select  
either Applications or Online Gaming:  
Applications. The Applications list lets you select existing applications, but scroll  
down to the bottom to select Add a new application.  
Online Gaming. The Online Gaming list lets you select existing games, but scroll  
down to the bottom to select Add a new game.  
18. In the QoS Policy for field, type a descriptive name for the new application or game.  
19. From the Priority list, select the priority that this traffic should receive relative to other  
applications and traffic when accessing the Internet. Select Highest, High, Normal, or Low.  
20. In the Connection Type field, select either TCP, UDP, or TCP/UDP.  
21. In the Starting Port and Ending Port fields, specify the port number or range of port  
numbers that the application or game uses.  
22. Click the Apply button.  
The rule is saved in the QoS policy table on the QoS Setup screen.  
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23. To create a QoS priority rule for traffic from a specific MAC address, in the Priority  
Category list, select MAC Address.  
24. In the QoS Policy for field, type a descriptive name for the MAC address.  
25. If the device for which you want to create a QoS policy is displayed in the MAC Device List,  
select its radio button.  
The information from the MAC Device List populates the QoS Policy for, MAC Address,  
and Device Name fields.  
26. (Optional) If the device does not display in the MAC Device List, click the Refresh button.  
If it still does not display, you must complete these fields manually.  
27. From the Priority list, select the priority that this traffic should receive relative to other  
applications and traffic when accessing the Internet. Select Highest, High, Normal, or Low.  
28. Click the Apply button.  
The rule is saved in the QoS policy table on the QoS Setup screen.  
29. To edit or delete a MAC address on the MAC Device List, in the Priority Category list,  
select MAC Address.  
30. Select the radio button next to the device that you want to edit or delete, and do one of the  
following:  
To remove the device from the table, click the Delete button.  
To edit the MAC address, device name, or priority, click the Edit button.  
Edit the information you want to change.  
Note: You cannot delete or edit a device that is detected and automatically  
added to the MAC Device List.  
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31. Click the Apply button.  
The device information is saved or removed from the MAC Device List.  
32. To allocate half of the WAN bandwidth to a special host in heavy traffic situations, select  
the Enable Trusted IP address check box.  
In the field that is provided, enter the IP address of the trusted host.  
33. Click the Apply button.  
You settings are saved.  
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5.  
USB Port  
5
Enhance your local network  
This chapter describes how to use the USB port on your Trek to enhance your local network.  
This chapter contains the following sections:  
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Enhance Your Local Network  
Find the USB port on your Trek.  
NETGEAR  
R
eset  
P
o w e r  
Internet
Internet  
W
iF i  
LAN  
U S B  
USB  
USB port  
Figure 14. USB port  
You can use the USB port for any of the following applications in the following ways:  
Network storage. Back up the files on your computers and digital devices to a network  
drive. For more information, see Set Up Network Storage on page 68.  
ReadySHARE Access. Share the files on your network drive with local and remote  
computers and digital devices. For more information, see Access and Share Your  
ReadySHARE Printer. Send the files on your computers and digital devices to a network  
printer. For more information, see Set Up a Network Printer on page 81.  
Auxiliary power outlet. Power or recharge a USB device. For more information, see  
The USB port on the Trek can connect only USB devices such as flash drives or USB hard  
drives, USB printers, and USB power-compatible devices.  
Do not connect computers, USB modems, USB hubs, CD drives, or DVD drives to the Trek’s  
USB port.  
USB Port  
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Set Up Network Storage  
You can back up the files on your local computers and digital devices to a network drive.  
ReadySHARE lets you access and share a USB drive connected the Trek’s USB port.  
The Trek works with most USB-compliant external flash and hard drives. If your USB device  
requires nonstandard drivers, it is not compatible. For the most up-to-date list of USB drives  
supported by the Trek, visit kbserver.netgear.com/readyshare.  
Connect or Safely Remove a USB Drive  
The Trek supports both read and write for FAT16, FAT32, NTFS, and Linux file systems  
(EXT2 and EXT3). Some USB external hard drives and flash drives require drivers to be  
loaded into the Windows computer before the Windows computer can access the USB  
device. Such USB devices do not work with the Trek.  
To physically disconnect a USB drive from the Trek USB port, first log in to the Trek and then  
safely remove it.  
To connect a USB storage device:  
1. Insert your USB storage device into the USB port of the Trek.  
For information about how to locate the USB port, see Enhance Your Local Network on  
2. If your USB device has a power supply, you must use it when you connect the USB device  
to the Trek.  
It might take up to two minutes before the USB device is ready for sharing.  
To remove a USB disk drive safely:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
USB Port  
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5. Select BASIC > ReadySHARE.  
6. Click the Safely Remove USB Device button.  
This takes the drive offline.  
7. Physically disconnect the USB drive.  
View or Configure a USB Drive  
You can view or configure your USB storage device:  
View the basic information about the drive.  
Set up the device name, workgroups, and network folders.  
View or change the network folders.  
For more security, share only approved USB devices.  
To view basic information about the USB storage device:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
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5. Select BASIC > ReadySHARE.  
The screen displays a USB storage device if it is attached to the Trek USB port.  
If you logged in to the Trek before you connected your USB device, you might not see  
your USB device in this screen. If this happens, log out and then log back in.  
6. To view the files and folders on the USB device, click the network device name or the share  
name.  
7. To view more detail or to change the USB device settings, click the Edit button.  
The USB Storage (Advanced Settings) screen displays. For more information, see  
Configure the USB Storage Device and Access Settings  
You can set up the device name, workgroups, and network folders for your USB device.  
To view or change the USB storage advanced settings:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
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5. Select BASIC > ReadySHARE.  
6. Click the Edit button.  
7. To specify access to the USB storage device, provide the following information:  
Network Device Name. The default is readyshare. This name is the name used to  
access the USB device connected to the Trek.  
Workgroup. If you are using a Windows workgroup rather than a domain, the  
workgroup name displays here. The name works only in an operating system that  
supports NetBIOS, such as Microsoft Windows.  
Access Method. Select the check boxes for the access methods that you want:  
-
-
Network Neighborhood/MacShare. Enabled by default.  
HTTP. Enabled by default. You can type readyshare.routerlogin.net/shares to  
access the USB drive.  
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-
HTTP (via Internet). Disabled by default. If you enable this feature, remote users  
can type http://<public IP address/shares> (for example, http://1.1.10.102/shares)  
or a URL domain name to access the USB drive over the Internet. This feature  
supports file uploading only.  
-
-
FTP. Disabled by default.  
FTP (via Internet). Disabled by default. If you select this check box, remote users  
can access the USB drive through FTP over the Internet. This feature supports  
both downloading and uploading of files.  
8. If you changed the settings, click the Apply button.  
Your changes are saved.  
Configure the Available Network Folders  
You can view or change the network folders on the USB storage device.  
To view network folders:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select BASIC > ReadySHARE.  
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6. Click the Edit button.  
7. Scroll down to the Available Networks Folder section of the screen. The following  
information displays:  
Share Name. If only one device is connected, the default share name is  
USB_Storage.  
You can click the name, or you can type it in the address field of your web browser. If  
Not Shared is shown, the default share has been deleted, and no other share for the  
root folder exists. Click the link to change this setting.  
Read Access and Write Access. Show the permissions and access controls on the  
network folder. All – no password (the default) allows all users to access the network  
folder. The password for admin is the same one that you use to log in to the Trek.  
Folder Name. Full path of the network folder.  
Volume Name. Volume name from the storage device (either USB drive or HDD).  
Total Space and Free Space. Show the current utilization of the storage device.  
To add a network folder:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
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5. Select BASIC > ReadySHARE.  
6. Click the Edit button.  
7. Click the Create Network Folder button.  
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If the Create Network Folder screen does not display, your web browser might be  
blocking pop-ups. If it is, then change the browser settings to allow pop-ups.  
8. Click the Browse button next to the Folder field, and select the folder.  
9. Enter a name in the Share Name field.  
10. In the Read Access list and the Write Access list, select the settings that you want.  
The user name (account name) for All – no password is guest. The password for admin is  
the same one that is used to log in to the Trek. By default, it is password.  
11. Click the Apply button.  
The folder is added on the USB device.  
To edit a network folder:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select BASIC > ReadySHARE.  
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6. Click the Edit button.  
7. Click the Edit button.  
The Edit Network Folder screen displays the same settings shown in the Create Network  
Folder screen.  
8. Change the settings in the fields as needed.  
9. Click the Apply button.  
Your changes are saved.  
Specify Approved USB Devices  
For more security, you can set up the Trek to share only approved USB devices.  
To set up approved USB devices:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
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5. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > USB Settings.  
6. Click the Approved Devices button.  
This screen shows the approved USB devices and the available USB devices.  
7. In the Available USB Devices list, select the drive that you want to approve.  
8. Click the Add button.  
9. Select the Allow only approved devices check box.  
10. Click the Apply button.  
Your change takes effect.  
If you want to work with another USB device, first click the Safely Remove USB Device  
button for the currently connected USB device and physically remove the device. Connect  
the other USB device and repeat this process. For more information, see Connect or Safely  
Access and Share Your Network Storage  
You can share files on the USB drive for a wide variety of business and recreational  
purposes. The files can be Windows, Mac, or Linux file types (NTFS, FAT32, HFS+, Ext 3,  
Ext 4), including text, Word, PowerPoint, Excel, MP3, picture, and multimedia files.  
Common Uses of Network Sharing  
USB drive applications include the following:  
Sharing multimedia such as MP3 files, pictures, and other multimedia with local and  
remote users.  
Sharing resources on your network. You can store files in a central location so that you  
do not have to power up a computer to perform local sharing. In addition, you can share  
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files between Macintosh, Linux, and Windows computers by using the USB drive as a  
go-between across the systems.  
Sharing large files such as Word documents, PowerPoint presentations, and text files  
with remote users.  
Share Photos and Multimedia  
You can create your own central storage location for photos and multimedia. This method  
eliminates the need to log in to (and pay for) an external photo-sharing site.  
To share photos and multimedia with your friends and family:  
1. Insert your USB drive into the USB port on the Trek either directly or with a USB cable.  
Computers on your local area network (LAN) can automatically access this USB drive  
using a web browser or Microsoft Networking.  
Print High-Quality Photos from a Nonshared Printer  
You can print high-quality photos from a nonshared printer. This scenario is for a family that  
does not have a print server:  
A family member has photos on a Macintosh computer and wants to print them.  
The photo-capable color printer is directly attached to a Windows computer, but not  
shared on the network.  
The Mac and the Windows computer are not visible to each other on the network.  
To print high-quality photos from a nonshared printer, do one of the following:  
On the Mac, access the USB drive by typing \\readyshare in the address field of a web  
browser. Then copy the photos to the USB drive.  
On a Window computer, use a web browser or Microsoft Networking to copy the files from  
the USB drive to the computer. Then print the files.  
Send Large Files over the Internet  
Sending files that are larger than 5 MB can pose a problem for many email systems. The  
Trek allows you to share large files such as PowerPoint presentations or .zip files over the  
Internet. You can use FTP to download shared files from the Trek.  
Sharing files with a remote colleague involves the following considerations:  
The two user accounts are admin and guest. The password for admin is the same one  
that you use to access the Trek. By default, it is password. The guest user account has  
no password.  
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On the FTP site, the person receiving the files uses the guest user account and enters  
the password. FTP requires that you type something in the password field.  
Be sure to select the FTP (via Internet) check box in the USB Storage (Advanced  
Settings) screen. This option supports both downloading and uploading of files.  
Note: You can select the HTTP (via Internet) check box on the USB  
Storage (Advanced Settings) screen to share large files. This option  
supports downloading files only.  
Access Your USB Storage Device Locally  
When you connect the USB device to the Trek USB port, it might take up to two minutes  
before it is ready for sharing. By default, the USB storage device is available to all computers  
on your local area network (LAN).  
To access the USB device from a local Mac computer:  
1. Select Go > Connect to Server.  
2. Enter smb://readyshare as the server address.  
3. Click the Connect button.  
To access the USB device from a local Windows computer:  
Use any of these methods:  
Select Start > Run. Enter \\readyshare in the dialog box and click the OK button.  
Open a browser and enter \\readyshare in the address bar.  
Open My Network Places and enter \\readyshare in the address bar.  
To map the USB device to a local Windows network drive:  
2. In the ReadySHARE USB Storage Access pane, click the PC Utility link.  
The readyshareconnect.exe file is downloaded to your computer.  
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3. Launch readyshareconnect.exe.  
4. Select the drive letter that you want to map to the network folder.  
5. If you want to connect to the USB drive as a different user, select the Connect using  
different credentials check box.  
a. Type the user name and password that you want to use.  
b. Click the OK button.  
6. Click the Finish button.  
The USB drive is mapped to the drive letter that you specified.  
Access Your USB Storage Device Remotely  
When you connect the USB device to the Trek USB port, it might take up to two minutes  
before it is ready for sharing. You can access your USB storage device remotely.  
To access the USB drive from a remote computer:  
1. Launch a web browser.  
2. Connect using the Trek’s Internet port IP address.  
If you are using Dynamic DNS, you can type the DNS name, rather than the IP address.  
You can view the Trek’s Internet IP address on the BASIC Home screen (see Internet  
To use remote FTP access, make sure that the FTP check box is selected in the Access  
Method section of the USB Storage (Advanced Settings) screen. For more information, see  
To access the USB drive with FTP from a remote computer:  
1. Launch a web browser.  
2. Type ftp:// and the Internet port IP address in the address field of the browser.  
For example, type ftp://10.1.65.4.  
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If you are using Dynamic DNS, you can type the DNS name rather than the IP address.  
3. Type the account name and password for the account that has access rights to the USB  
drive.  
The user name (account name) for All – no password is guest.  
The directories of the USB drive that your account has access to display. For example,  
you could see share/partition1/directory1. You can now read and copy files  
from the USB directory.  
To access the USB drive with ReadySHARE access from the Internet:  
You can access your USB device in any of the following ways:  
On Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Windows 2000  
systems, select Start > Run, and enter \\readyshare in the dialog box. Click the OK  
button.  
On Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Windows 2000  
systems, open Internet Explorer or Safari, and enter \\readyshare in the address bar.  
On Mac OS X (version 10.2 or later), enter smb://readyshare in the address bar.  
In My Network Places, enter \\readyshare in the address bar.  
For more information about ReadySHARE access for USB storage devices, visit  
www.netgear.com/readyshare.  
Set Up a Network Printer  
The ReadySHARE Printer utility allows you to control from your computer a shared USB  
printer that is connected to the USB port on your Trek. You can share this USB printer among  
the Windows and Mac computers on your network.  
You must install this utility before you can use the ReadySHARE Printer feature. For this  
feature to work, the following conditions must be met:  
This utility must be installed and running in the background on each computer from which  
you want to control this USB printer.  
The driver software for the USB printer must be installed on each computer from which  
you want to control this USB printer.  
The ReadySHARE Printer utility has both a Mac version and a Windows version. The  
ReadySHARE Printer utility setup file and instructions are available at  
www.netgear.com/readyshare. After you install the ReadySHARE Printer utility, it displays on  
your computer as the NETGEAR USB Control Center.  
To set up ReadySHARE Printer:  
1. Using a USB printer cable, connect a USB printer to the Trek’s USB port.  
For information about how to locate the USB port, see Enhance Your Local Network on  
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2. Install the USB printer driver software on each computer that shares the printer.  
If you do not have the printer driver, contact the printer manufacturer.  
3. On each computer that shares the printer, download the NETGEAR USB Control Center  
utility.  
The NETGEAR USB utility has a Mac version and a Windows version, which you can  
access in two different ways:  
From the ReadySHARE Printer area of the page you access from  
From the ReadySHARE section of the desktop NETGEAR genie.  
Note: You must install this utility before you can use the ReadySHARE  
Printer feature. For the ReadySHARE Printer feature to work, this  
utility must be running in the background.  
4. Follow the instructions to install the NETGEAR USB Control Center utility.  
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5. After you install the utility, select a language.  
If this setup is the first time you are accessing the utility, you are asked to select the  
printer.  
6. Click the Connect button.  
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Once the connection is established, the status changes to Manually connected by xxx.  
7. Click the Disconnect button at any time to release the connection.  
The status then changes to Available.  
For each computer, after you click the Connect and Disconnect buttons once, the utility  
automatically handles the printing queue. The status of the printer displays as Available on all  
the computers. Here are the rules of operation:  
When the status is Available, you can use the USB printer.  
When the status is Manually connected by xxx, only the xxx computer can use the printer.  
Other network devices must wait until the xxx computer has released the connection, or  
until the connection times out (the default time-out value is 30 seconds).  
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You can set the value for the default time-out time from the Control Center -  
Configuration screen.  
The USB Control Center utility must be running for the computer to print to the USB  
printer attached to the Trek. If you exit the utility, printing does not work.  
Some firewall software, such as Comodo, blocks the ReadySHARE Print utility from  
accessing the USB printer. If you do not see the printer in the utility, you can disable  
the firewall temporarily to allow the utility to work.  
8. If your printer supports scanning, make sure that the printer is in the Available state and click  
the Network Scanner button.  
This step activates the scanner window so that you can use the printer for scanning.  
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Power or Recharge a USB Device  
When your Trek is powered by an AC wall outlet, you can power or recharge a USB device  
from the Trek’s USB port. For example, you can use the USB port to recharge your cell  
phone. For information about how to locate the USB port, see Enhance Your Local Network  
When the Trek is powered from a micro USB cable, you cannot use the Trek’s USB port as  
an auxiliary power source. For more information about your choices of providing power to the  
The maximum power that is supplied by the Trek’s USB port is a current of 900 mA at 5 volts.  
To find out how much current your USB device draws, see the manual that came with your  
device.  
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6.  
Security  
6
Keep unwanted content out of your  
network  
This chapter explains how to use the basic firewall features of the Trek to prevent objectionable  
content from reaching the computers and other devices connected to your network.  
The chapter includes the following sections:  
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Port Filtering to Block Services  
Services are functions performed by server computers at the request of client computers. For  
example, web servers serve web pages, time servers serve time and date information, and  
game hosts serve data about players’ moves. When a computer on the Internet sends a  
request for service to a server computer, the requested service gets identified by a service or  
port number. This number appears as the destination port number in the transmitted IP  
packets. For example, a packet that is sent with the destination port number 80 is an HTTP  
(web server) request.  
The service numbers for many common protocols are defined by the Internet Engineering  
Task Force (IETF at www.ietf.org/) and published in RFC1700, “Assigned Numbers.” The  
authors of other applications typically choose service numbers for those applications from the  
range 1024–65535. Although the Trek already holds a list of many service port numbers, you  
are not limited to these choices. You can often find port number information by contacting the  
publisher of the application, by asking user groups or newsgroups, or by searching.  
You can add and block specific Internet services by computers on your network. This process  
is called service blocking or port filtering. To add a service for blocking, first determine which  
port number or range of numbers the application uses.  
To block services:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
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5. Select ADVANCED > Security > Block Services.  
6. Select either the Per Schedule radio button or the Always radio button.  
7. If you selected Per Schedule, specify a time period in the Schedule screen.  
For more information, see Schedule Blocking on page 90.  
8. Click the Add button.  
9. From the Service Type list, select the application or service to block.  
The list displays several common services, but you are not limited to these choices. To  
add any additional services or applications that do not already appear, select User  
Defined.  
10. If you know that the application uses either TCP or UDP, select the appropriate protocol. If  
you are not sure, select TCP/UDB (both).  
11. Enter the starting and ending port numbers.  
If the application uses a single port number, enter that number in both fields.  
12. Select the radio button for the IP address configuration you want to block, and enter the IP  
addresses.  
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You can block the specified service for a single computer, a range of computers with  
consecutive IP addresses, or all computers on your network.  
13. Click the Add button.  
Your changes are saved.  
Schedule Blocking  
You can specify the days and time that you want to block Internet access.  
To schedule blocking:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Security > Schedule.  
6. Set up the schedule for blocking keywords and services. Here is what you can choose:  
Days to Block. Select days on which you want to apply blocking by selecting the  
appropriate check boxes, or select the Every Day check box to select the check  
boxes for all days.  
Time of Day to Block. Select a start and end time in 24-hour format, or select the All  
Day check box for 24-hour blocking.  
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7. Select your time zone from the list.  
8. If you use daylight saving time, select the Automatically adjust for daylight savings time  
check box.  
9. Click the Apply button.  
Your settings are saved.  
Security Event Email Notifications  
You can receive logs and alerts by email and specify which alerts you want to receive and  
how often.  
To set up email notifications:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Security > E-mail.  
6. Select the Turn E-mail Notification On check box.  
7. In the Your Outgoing Mail Server field, enter the name of your ISP’s 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.  
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8. 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 you leave this field blank, log and  
alert messages are not sent.  
9. To use a secure connection, select the Secure connection (use SSL) check box.  
10. If your outgoing email server requires authentication, select the My Mail Server requires  
authentication check box.  
Complete the User Name and Password fields for the outgoing email server.  
11. To have alerts sent immediately, select the Send Alerts Immediately check box.  
Email alerts are sent immediately when someone attempts to visit a blocked site.  
12. Enter the information in the fields in the Send logs according to this schedule section of the  
screen.  
Logs are sent automatically. If the log fills up before the specified time, the log is emailed.  
After the log is sent, the log is cleared from the Trek memory. If the Trek cannot email the  
log file, the log buffer might fill up. In this case, the Trek overwrites the log and discards its  
contents.  
13. Click the Apply button.  
Your settings are saved.  
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7.  
Administration  
7
Manage your network  
This chapter describes the Trek settings for administering and maintaining your Trek and local  
network.  
The chapter includes the following sections:  
Some information for administering and maintaining your Trek and local network are described  
in separate chapters:  
For information about setting and recovering your password, see Change the Password  
For information about the devices that are connected to your network, see Attached  
For information about upgrading or checking the status of your Trek over the Internet,  
For information about monitoring the volume of Internet traffic passing through your  
Trek’s Internet port, seeTraffic Meter on page 122.  
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View Trek Status  
To view Trek status and usage information:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Click the ADVANCED tab.  
Note: The Router Status screen also displays when you select  
ADVANCED > Advanced Home or  
ADVANCED > Administration > Router Status.  
Router Information Pane  
To display the Router Information pane:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
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The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Click the ADVANCED tab.  
The following information displays:  
Hardware Version. The Trek model.  
Firmware Version. The version of the Trek firmware. It changes if you upgrade the  
Trek firmware.  
GUI Language Version. The localized language of the Trek user interface.  
LAN Port:  
-
-
-
MAC Address. The Media Access Control address for the LAN port. This address  
is the unique physical address that the Ethernet (LAN) port of the Trek uses.  
IP Address. The IP address that the Ethernet (LAN) port of the Trek uses. The  
default is 192.168.168.1.  
DHCP Server. Identifies whether the Trek’s built-in DHCP server is active for the  
LAN-attached devices.  
Internet Port Pane  
To display the Internet Port pane:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
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2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Click the ADVANCED tab.  
The following information displays:  
MAC Address. The Media Access Control (MAC) address for the Internet port. This  
address is the unique physical address that the Internet (WAN) port of the Trek uses.  
IP Address. The IP address that the Internet (WAN) port of the Trek uses. If no  
address is shown or the address is 0.0.0.0, the Trek is not connected to the Internet.  
Connection. Shows whether the Trek is using a fixed or dynamic IP address on the  
Internet port. If the value is DHCP, the Trek obtains an IP address dynamically from  
the ISP or from a DHCP server on your LAN.  
IP Subnet Mask. The IP subnet mask that the Internet port of the Trek uses.  
Domain Name Server. The Domain Name Server address that the Trek uses. A  
Domain Name Server translates human-language URLs such as www.netgear.com  
into IP addresses.  
Statistics  
The Trek provides various statistics.  
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To view the traffic statistics:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Click the ADVANCED tab.  
6. In the Internet Port pane, click the Show Statistics button.  
The following information displays:  
System Up Time. The time elapsed since the Trek was last restarted.  
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Port. The statistics for the WAN (Internet) port, the LAN (Ethernet) port, and the  
wireless LAN (WLAN) port.  
Status. The link status of the port.  
TxPkts. The number of packets transmitted on this port since reset or manual clear.  
RxPkts. The number of packets received on this port since reset or manual clear.  
Collisions. The number of collisions on this port since reset or manual clear.  
Up Time. The time elapsed since this port acquired the link.  
Poll Interval. The interval at which the statistics are updated on this screen.  
7. To change the polling frequency, enter a time in seconds in the Poll Interval field, and click  
the Set Interval button.  
8. To stop the polling entirely, click the Stop button.  
Connection Status  
The content of this screen depends on the type of connection. For example, different  
information is shown for a PPPoE connection than for a DHCP connection.  
To view and manage the connection status:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
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5. Click the ADVANCED tab.  
6. In the Internet Port pane, click the Connection Status button.  
The content of the Connection Status pop-up screen depends on the type of connection.  
You can start new connections and end existing connections from this screen.  
The following list describes the different types of connections and the associated settings  
that display on the Connection Status pop-up screen:  
DHCP connection. The following information displays for a DHCP connection:  
-
-
-
IP Address. The IP address that is assigned to the Trek.  
Subnet Mask. The subnet mask that is assigned to the Trek.  
Default Gateway. The IP address for the default gateway that the Trek  
communicates with.  
-
-
DHCP Server. The IP address for the Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol  
server that configures the TCP/IP for all the computers that are connected to the  
Trek.  
DNS Server. The IP address of the Domain Name Service server that translates  
network names to IP addresses.  
-
-
Lease Obtained. The date and time when the lease was obtained.  
Lease Expires. The date and time that the lease expires.  
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Choose any of the following actions:  
a. To release the Trek’s IP address and terminate the Internet connection, click the  
Release button.  
b. To let the Trek acquire an IP address from the DHCP server and start the  
Internet connection, click the Renew button.  
c. To close the Connection Status screen, click the Close Window button.  
PPPoE connection. The following information displays for a PPPoE connection:  
Connection Time. The time that elapsed since the connection was established.  
Connection Status. The status of the connection: Connected, Disconnected,  
Negotiation (---, Success), or Authentication (---, Success). --- indicates failure.  
IP Address. The IP address that is assigned to the Trek.  
Subnet Mask. The subnet mask that is assigned to the Trek.  
The Connect and Disconnect buttons in the Connection Status screen display only  
when the connection mode is Manually Connect.  
Choose any of the following actions:  
a. To establish the PPPoE connection manually, click the Connect button.  
b. To terminate the PPPoE connection manually, click the Disconnect button.  
c. To close the Connection Status screen, click the Close Window button.  
PPTP connection. The following information displays for a PPTP connection:  
Connection Status. The status of the connection: Connected or Disconnected.  
IP Address. The IP address that is assigned to the Trek.  
Subnet Mask. The subnet mask that is assigned to the Trek.  
The Connect and Disconnect buttons in the Connection Status screen display only  
when the connection mode is Manually Connect.  
Choose any of the following actions:  
a. To establish the PPTP connection manually, click the Connect button.  
b. To terminate the PPTP connection manually, click the Disconnect button.  
c. To close the Connection Status screen, click the Close Window button.  
Wireless Settings Pane  
To display the Wireless Settings pane:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
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The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Click the ADVANCED tab.  
The following information displays:  
Name (SSID). The wireless network name (SSID) that the Trek uses.  
Region. The geographic region where the Trek is used. It might be illegal to use the  
wireless features of the Trek in some parts of the world.  
Channel. The operating channel of the wireless port. The default channel is Auto.  
When Auto is selected, the Trek finds the best operating channel available.  
Mode. The wireless communication mode: Up to 54 Mbps, Up to 150 Mbps (the  
default), or Up to 300 Mbps.  
Wireless AP. Indicates whether the radio of the Trek is enabled. If the radio is not  
enabled, the WiFi LED is off.  
Broadcast Name. Indicates whether the Trek is broadcasting its SSID.  
Wireless Isolation. Indicates whether wireless isolation is on or off. When it is off,  
wireless clients (computers or wireless devices) that join the network can use the  
Internet, but cannot access each other or access Ethernet devices on the network.  
Wi-Fi Protected Setup. Indicates whether Wi-Fi Protected Setup is configured for  
this network.  
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Specify Log Settings  
A log is a detailed record of the websites that users on your network have accessed or  
attempted to access. If you have set up services blocking on the Block Services screen, the  
Logs screen shows you when someone on your network tried to access a blocked service. If  
you have email notification on, you receive these logs in an email message. If you do not  
have email notification set up, you can view the logs here.  
To view and manage the logs:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Administration > Logs.  
The Logs screen shows the following information:  
Source IP. The IP address of the initiating device for this log entry.  
Target address. The name or IP address of the website or news group visited or to  
which access was attempted.  
Action. The action that occurred.  
Date and time. The date and time the log entry was recorded.  
6. Do any of the following:  
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To refresh the log screen, click the Refresh button.  
To clear the log entries, click the Clear Log button.  
To email the log, click the Send Log button.  
To specify log settings:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Administration > Logs.  
6. Select the following check boxes for the events that you want to include in the log:  
Attempted access to allowed sites  
Attempted access to blocked sites and services  
Connections to the Web-based interface of this Router  
Router operation (startup, get time etc)  
Known DoS attacks and Port Scans  
Port Forwarding / Port Triggering  
Wireless access  
7. Click the Apply button.  
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Manage the Configuration File  
The configuration settings of the Trek are stored within the Trek 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 Trek’s configuration settings:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Administration > Backup Settings.  
6. Click the Back Up button.  
A screen displays asking you where you want to store your settings.  
7. Choose a location to store the .cfgfile that is on a computer on your network.  
8. Click the OK button.  
A copy of the current settings is saved.  
Restore Configuration Settings  
To restore configuration settings that you backed up:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
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The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Administration > Backup Settings.  
6. Click the Browse button to find and select the .cfgfile.  
7. Click the Restore button.  
The file is uploaded to the Trek.  
The Trek reboots.  
WARNING:  
Do not interrupt the reboot process.  
Erase the Current Configuration Settings  
You can use the Erase button to erase the configuration and restore the factory default  
settings. You might want to erase the settings if you move the Trek to a different network.  
You can also use the Reset button of the Trek to erase the configuration and restore the  
factory settings. For more information, see Factory Settings on page 139.  
To erase the configuration settings:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
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4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Administration > Backup Settings.  
6. Click the Erase button.  
The factory default settings are restored. The password for the user name admin is  
password and the LAN IP address is 192.168.168.1. DHCP is enabled.  
Update the Trek Firmware  
The Trek firmware (routing software) is stored in flash memory. You might see a message at  
the top of the genie screens when new firmware is available for your product.  
You can check and update to the latest firmware for your product when new firmware is  
available.  
To check for new firmware and update your Trek:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
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5. Select ADVANCED > Administration > Firmware Update.  
6. Click the Check button.  
If new firmware is available, the Trek detects it and displays the Firmware Update  
Assistant screen.  
7. To update the Trek to the new firmware, click the Yes button.  
8. If you have manually downloaded new firmware from the NETGEAR support website, do the  
following:  
a. Click Browse, navigate to the firmware file (the file ends in .img), and select the  
firmware file.  
b. Click the Upload button.  
A progress bar shows the progress of the firmware upload process:  
WARNING:  
When uploading firmware to the Trek, do not interrupt the web  
browser by closing the window, clicking a link, or loading a new  
page. If the browser is interrupted, the firmware might be corrupted.  
When the upload is complete, your Trek restarts. The upload process can take up to  
three minutes, and the upgrade process typically takes about one minute. To determine  
whether you need to reconfigure the Trek after upgrading, read the new firmware release  
notes.  
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8.  
Advanced Settings  
8
Fine-tune your network  
This chapter describes the advanced features of your Trek. This information is for users with a  
solid understanding of networking concepts who want to set up the Trek for unique situations  
such as remote access from the Internet by IP or domain name.  
The chapter includes the following sections:  
For added security, you can set up the Trek to share only approved USB devices. For more  
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Advanced Wireless Settings  
You can turn the wireless radio on and off, specify WPS settings, and set up a wireless  
access list.  
The Fragmentation Length, CTS/RTS Threshold, and Preamble Mode options in this screen  
are reserved for wireless testing and advanced configuration only. Do not change these  
settings unless you have a specific reason to do so.  
Control the Wireless Radio  
By default, the wireless radio is enabled so that you can connect wirelessly to the Trek. You  
can turn the wireless radio on or off in the Advanced Wireless Settings screen. When the  
wireless radio is off, you can still use an Ethernet cable for the WAN and LAN connections to  
the Trek.  
To turn the wireless radio on or off:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Wireless Settings.  
By default, the Enable Wireless Router Radio check box is selected.  
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6. Select or clear the Enable Wireless Router Radio check box.  
Clearing this check box turns off the WiFi feature of the wireless Trek.  
7. To specify the times when you do not need a wireless connection, select the Turn off  
wireless signal by schedule check box and enter the information in the fields provided.  
For example, you could turn off the wireless signal for the weekend if you leave town.  
You can select the Turn off wireless signal by schedule check box only when the Trek  
is operating in wired WAN mode.  
8. Click the Apply button.  
Your changes take effect.  
Set Up a Wireless Schedule  
You can turn off the wireless signal from your Trek at times when you do not need a wireless  
connection. For example, you could turn it off for the weekend if you leave town. You can turn  
the wireless radio off only when the Trek is operating in wired WAN mode.  
To configure and enable the wireless schedule:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
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5. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Wireless Settings.  
6. Select the Turn off wireless signal by schedule check box.  
The Turn off wireless signal by schedule check box can be selected only when the  
Trek is operating in wired WAN mode.  
7. Click the Add a new period button.  
8. Use the lists, radio buttons, and check boxes to set up a period during which you want to  
turn off the wireless signal.  
9. Click the Apply button.  
The Advanced Wireless Settings screen displays.  
10. Click the Apply button.  
Your changes are saved.  
View or Change WPS Settings  
To specify WPS settings:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
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3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Wireless Settings.  
6. Scroll down to display the WPS settings:  
The Router’s PIN field displays the PIN that you use on a registrar (for example, from  
Network Explorer on a Vista Windows computer) to configure the Trek’s wireless settings  
through WPS.  
7. (Optional) Select or clear the Disable Router’s PIN check box.  
The PIN function might temporarily be disabled when the Trek detects suspicious  
attempts to break into the Trek’s wireless settings by using the Trek’s PIN through WPS.  
You can manually enable the PIN function by clearing the Disable Router’s PIN check  
box.  
8. (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 Trek, the Trek wireless settings change to an automatically generated random SSID  
and security key.  
9. Click the Apply button.  
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Your changes are saved.  
Set Up a Wireless Access List by MAC Address  
You can set up a list of computers and wireless devices that are allowed to join the wireless  
network. This list is based on the unique MAC address of each computer and device.  
Each network device has a MAC address, which is a unique 12-character physical address  
containing the hexadecimal characters 0–9, a–f, or A–F only, and separated by colons (for  
example, 00:09:AB:CD:EF:01). Typically, the MAC address is on the label of the wireless  
card or network interface device. If you do not have access to the label, you can display the  
MAC address using the network configuration utilities of the computer. You might also find  
the MAC addresses in the Attached Devices screen.  
To restrict access based on MAC addresses:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Wireless Settings.  
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6. Scroll down and click the Set Up Access List button.  
7. On the Wireless Card Access List screen, click the Add button.  
The Wireless Card Access Setup screen opens and displays a list of currently active  
wireless cards and their Ethernet MAC addresses.  
8. If the computer or device you want is in the Available Wireless Cards list, select that radio  
button; otherwise, type a name and the MAC address.  
You can usually find the MAC address on the label of the wireless device.  
Tip: You can copy and paste the MAC addresses from the Attached  
Devices screen into the MAC Address field of this screen. To do this,  
use each wireless computer to join the wireless network. The  
computer then appears in the Attached Devices screen.  
For more information about the attached devices, see Attached Devices on page 44.  
9. Click the Add button.  
The screen changes back to the list screen.  
10. Add each computer or device that you want to allow to connect wirelessly.  
11. Select the Turn Access Control On check box.  
12. Click the Apply button.  
To edit a wireless device or delete it from the access list:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
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4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Wireless Settings.  
The Advanced Wireless Settings screen displays.  
6. In the table, select the radio button next to the wireless device that you want to edit or  
delete.  
7. Do one of the following:  
Click the Edit button.  
The Edit Wireless Card screen displays.  
a. Edit the address information.  
b. Click the Accept button.  
Click the Delete button.  
The address is removed from the table.  
Dynamic DNS  
If your Internet service provider (ISP) 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 ISP 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 Trek contains a client that can connect to the Dynamic DNS service provided by  
DynDNS.org. First visit their website at www.dyndns.org and obtain an account and host  
name that you configure in the Trek. Then, whenever your ISP-assigned IP address  
changes, your Trek 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 Trek at hostname.dyndns.org.  
Note: Before you set up Dynamic DNS on Trek, first register an account with  
one of the Dynamic DNS service providers whose URLs display in the  
Service Provider list on the Dynamic DNS screen.  
To set up Dynamic DNS:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
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2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Dynamic DNS.  
6. Register for an account with one of the Dynamic DNS service providers whose URLs are in  
the Service Provider list.  
7. Select the Use a Dynamic DNS Service check box.  
8. Select the URL of your Dynamic DNS service provider.  
For example, for DynDNS.org, select www.DynDNS.org.  
9. Type the host name (or domain name) that your Dynamic DNS service provider gave you.  
10. Type the user name for your Dynamic DNS account.  
Enter the name that you use to log in to your account, not your host name.  
11. Type the password (or key) for your Dynamic DNS account.  
12. Click the Apply button.  
Your changes are saved.  
Static Routes  
Static routes provide more routing information to your Trek. Under usual circumstances, the  
Trek has adequate routing information after it has been configured for Internet access, and  
you do not need to configure more static routes. You must configure static routes only for  
unusual cases such as multiple Treks or multiple IP subnets on your network.  
As an example of when a static route is needed, consider a situation with the following  
elements:  
Your primary Internet access is through a cable modem to an ISP.  
Advanced Settings  
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You have an ISDN Trek on your home network for connecting to the company where you  
are employed. This Trek’s address on your LAN is 192.168.168.100.  
Your company’s network address is 134.177.0.0.  
When you first configured your Trek, two implicit static routes were created. A default route  
was created with your ISP as the gateway, and a second static route was created to your  
local network for all 192.168.1.x addresses. With this configuration, if you attempt to access a  
device on the 134.177.0.0 network, your Trek forwards your request to the ISP. The ISP  
forwards your request to the company where you are employed, and the company’s firewall  
denies the request.  
In this case you must define a static route, telling your Trek that 134.177.0.0 should be  
accessed through the ISDN Trek at 192.168.168.100. This example assumes the following  
settings:  
The Destination IP Address and IP Subnet Mask fields specify that this static route  
applies to all 134.177.x.x addresses.  
The Gateway IP Address field specifies that all traffic for these addresses should be  
forwarded to the ISDN Trek at 192.168.168.100.  
A metric value of 1 works because the ISDN Trek is on the LAN.  
The Private check box is selected only as a precautionary security measure in case RIP  
is activated.  
To set up a static route:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Static Routes.  
Advanced Settings  
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6. Click the Add button.  
7. In the Route Name field, type a name for this static route (for identification purposes only).  
8. If you want to limit access to the LAN only, select the Private check box.  
If you select Private, the static route is not reported in RIP.  
9. To make this route effective, select the Active check box.  
By default, the Active check box is selected.  
10. Type the IP address of the final destination.  
11. Type the IP subnet mask for this destination. If the destination is a single host, type  
255.255.255.255.  
12. Type the gateway IP address, which must be a Trek on the same LAN segment as the Trek.  
13. Type a number from 1 through 15 as the metric value.  
This value represents the number of Treks between your network and the destination.  
Usually, a setting of 2 or 3 works, but if this link is a direct connection, set it to 1.  
14. Click the Apply button.  
The route is added to the table on the Static Routes screen.  
To edit or delete a static route:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
Advanced Settings  
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5. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Static Routes.  
6. In the table, select the radio button next to the route that you want to edit or delete, and do  
one of the following:  
To edit the route, click the Edit button.  
a. Edit the route information.  
b. Click the Apply button.  
To delete the route, click the Delete button.  
The route is removed from the table.  
Remote Management  
The remote management feature lets you access your Trek over the Internet to view or  
change its settings.  
Note: Before you enable remote management, be sure to change the Trek’s  
default login password 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 set up remote management:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
Advanced Settings  
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3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Remote Management.  
6. Select the Turn Remote Management On check box.  
7. Under Allow Remote Access By, specify the external IP addresses to be allowed to access  
the Trek’s remote management.  
Note: For enhanced security, restrict access to as few external IP addresses  
as practical.  
Select one of the following radio buttons:  
To allow access from a single IP address on the Internet, select the Only This  
Computer radio button. Enter the IP address that will 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.  
8. 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.  
9. Click the Apply button.  
Your changes take effect.  
When you access your Trek from the Internet, type your Trek’s WAN IP address into your  
browser’s address or location field followed by a colon (:) and the custom port number.  
Advanced Settings  
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For example, if your external address is 134.177.0.123 and you use port number 8080, enter  
134.177.0.123:8080 in your browser.  
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 turn on Universal Plug and Play:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > UPnP.  
6. 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 the resources of the Trek.  
7. Type the advertisement period in minutes.  
The advertisement period specifies how often the Trek 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.  
8. Type the advertisement time to live in hops.  
Advanced Settings  
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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 is 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.  
9. Click the Apply button.  
The UPnP Portmap Table displays the IP address of each UPnP device that is accessing  
the Trek 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.  
10. To refresh the information in the UPnP Portmap Table, click the Refresh button.  
Traffic Meter  
Traffic metering allows you to monitor the volume of Internet traffic that passes through the  
Trek Internet port. You can set limits for traffic volume.  
Traffic metering is available only when the Trek is operating in wired WAN mode. For more  
information about connection modes, see Internet Setup on page 34.  
To monitor Internet traffic:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
Advanced Settings  
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5. Click ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Traffic Meter.  
Scroll to view  
more settings  
6. Select the Enable Traffic Meter check box.  
7. (Optional) Control the volume of Internet traffic.  
You can use either the traffic volume control feature or the connection time control  
feature to accomplish this goal:  
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.  
8. (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.  
9. In the Traffic Counter section, set up the traffic counter to begin at a specific time and date  
of each month.  
If you want the traffic counter to start immediately, click the Restart Counter Now button.  
10. In the Traffic Control section, specify whether a warning message is issued before the  
monthly traffic limit of MB 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 traffic limit is reached:  
The Internet LED blinks green or amber.  
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The Internet connection is disconnected and disabled.  
11. Click the Apply button.  
Your changes are saved.  
To continue monitoring Internet traffic after the initial setup:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select ADVANCED > Advanced Setup > Traffic Meter.  
Scroll to view  
more settings  
Advanced Settings  
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6. In the Internet Traffic Statistics section, monitor the data traffic.  
7. To update the Traffic Statistics section, click the Refresh button.  
8. To display more information about the data traffic on your Trek and to change the poll  
interval, click the Traffic Status button.  
Advanced Settings  
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9.  
Troubleshooting  
9
Diagnose and solve problems  
This chapter provides information to help you diagnose and solve problems you might have with  
your Trek. If you do not find the solution here, visit the NETGEAR support site at  
support.netgear.com for product and contact information.  
The chapter contains the following sections:  
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Quick Tips  
You can save time by troubleshooting the common problems first.  
Sequence to Restart Your Network  
Restart your network in the following sequence:  
1. Turn off and unplug the modem.  
2. Turn off the Trek and computers.  
3. Plug in the modem and turn it on. Wait two minutes.  
4. Turn on the Trek and wait two minutes.  
5. Turn on the computers.  
Check Ethernet Cable Connections  
Make sure that the Ethernet cables are securely plugged in.  
The Internet status LED on the Trek is lit if the Ethernet cable connecting the Trek and the  
modem is plugged in securely and the modem and Trek are turned on.  
Wireless Settings  
Make sure that the wireless settings in the computer and Trek match exactly.  
For a wirelessly connected computer, the wireless network name (SSID) and wireless  
security settings of the Trek and wireless computer must match exactly.  
If you set up an access list in the Advanced Wireless Settings screen, you must add each  
wireless computer’s MAC address to the Trek’s access list.  
Network Settings  
Make sure that the network settings of the computer are correct.  
Wired and wirelessly connected computers must have network (IP) addresses on the same  
network as the Trek. The simplest way to set this up is to configure each computer to obtain  
an IP address automatically using DHCP.  
Some cable modem service providers require you to use the MAC address of the computer  
initially registered on the account. You can view the MAC address in the Attached Devices  
screen.  
Troubleshoot with the LEDs  
After you turn on power to the Trek, the following sequence of events occurs:  
Troubleshooting  
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1. When power is first applied, verify that the Power LED is lit.  
2. After approximately 30 seconds, verify the following:  
The Power LED is solid green.  
The Internet LED is lit.  
If using WiFi, the WiFi LED is lit.  
You can use the Trek’s LEDs for troubleshooting.  
Power LED Is Off  
Make sure that the power cord is securely connected to your Trek and that the power adapter  
is securely connected to a functioning power outlet.  
Make sure that you are using the 12 VDC, 2.5A power adapter that NETGEAR supplied for  
this product.  
LEDs Never Turn Off  
When the Trek is turned on, the LEDs light for about 10 seconds and then turn off. If all the  
LEDs stay lit, the fault is within the Trek.  
If all LEDs are still lit one minute after power-up, do the following:  
Cycle the power to see if the Trek recovers.  
Press and hold the Reset button to return the Trek to its factory settings. See Factory  
If the error persists, you might have a hardware problem. Contact technical support at  
www.netgear.com/support.  
Internet Port LED is Off  
If the Internet LED does not light when the Ethernet connection is made, check the following:  
Make sure that the Ethernet cable connections are secure at the Trek and at the modem  
or computer.  
Make sure that power is turned on to the connected modem or computer.  
Be sure that you are using the correct cable:  
When connecting the Trek’s Internet port to a cable or DSL modem, use the cable that  
was supplied with the cable or DSL modem. This cable could be a standard  
straight-through Ethernet cable or an Ethernet crossover cable.  
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WiFi LED is Off  
If the WiFi LED stays off, check to see if the Enable Wireless Router Radio check box on  
the Advanced Wireless Setting screen is selected. The WiFi LED is lit when the wireless  
radio is turned on.  
Log in to the Trek with an Ethernet cable to check this setting. For more information, see  
Cannot Log In to the Trek  
If you cannot log in to the Trek from a computer on your local network, check the following:  
If you are using an Ethernet-connected computer, check the Ethernet connection  
between the computer and the Trek. For more information, see Check Ethernet Cable  
Make sure that your computer’s IP address is on the same subnet as the Trek. If you are  
using the recommended addressing scheme, your computer’s address is in the range of  
192.168.168.2 to 192.168.168.200.  
If your computer’s 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 Trek, and reboot your  
computer.  
If your Trek’s IP address was changed and you do not know the current IP address, clear  
the Trek’s configuration to factory defaults. This sets the Trek’s IP address to  
192.168.168.1. For more information, see Factory Settings on page 139.  
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.  
Try quitting the browser and launching it again.  
Make sure that you are using the correct login information. The factory default login name  
is admin and the password is password. Make sure that Caps Lock is off when you enter  
this information.  
If you are attempting to set up your NETGEAR Trek as an additional router behind an  
existing router in your network, consider replacing the existing router instead. NETGEAR  
does not support such a configuration.  
If you are attempting to set up your NETGEAR Trek as a replacement for an ADSL  
gateway in your network, the Trek cannot perform many gateway services, for example,  
converting ADSL or cable data into Ethernet networking information. NETGEAR does not  
support such a configuration.  
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Cannot Access the Internet  
If you can access your Trek but you cannot access the Internet, first determine whether the  
Trek can obtain an IP address from your Internet service provider (ISP). Unless your ISP  
provides a fixed IP address, your Trek requests an IP address from the ISP. You can  
determine whether the request was successful.  
To check the WAN IP address:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select Administration > Router Status.  
6. Check that an IP address is shown for the Internet port.  
If 0.0.0.0 is shown, your Trek has not obtained an IP address from your ISP.  
7. If your Trek cannot obtain an IP address from the ISP, force your cable or DSL modem to  
recognize your new Trek by restarting your network.  
For more information, see Sequence to Restart Your Network on page 127.  
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If your Trek 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 whether they require 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 computer’s host name.  
Assign the computer host name of your ISP account as the account name in the  
Internet Settings screen.  
8. If your ISP allows only one Ethernet MAC address to connect to Internet and checks for your  
computer’s MAC address, do one of the following:  
-
Inform your ISP that you have bought a new network device, and ask them to use the  
Trek’s MAC address.  
-
Configure your Trek to clone your computer’s MAC address.  
If your Trek can obtain an IP address, but your computer cannot load any web pages from  
the Internet, it might be for one of 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 Trek’s  
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 Trek configured as its TCP/IP gateway.  
If your computer obtains its information from the Trek by DHCP, reboot the computer,  
and verify the gateway address.  
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 Trek. You might need to go to  
Internet Explorer and select Tools > Internet Options, click the Connections tab, and  
select the Never dial a connection radio button.  
Troubleshoot PPPoE  
If you are using PPPoE, try troubleshooting your Internet connection.  
To troubleshoot a PPPoE connection:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
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3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
5. Select Administration > Router Status.  
6. Click the Connection Status button. If the fields display the correct IP address and time  
information, your PPPoE connection is working.  
If any of the fields indicate failure, you can attempt to reconnect by clicking the Renew  
button. The Trek continues to attempt to connect indefinitely.  
If you cannot connect after several minutes, you might be using an incorrect service name,  
user name, or password. Or your ISP might have a provisioning problem.  
Note: Unless you connect manually, the Trek does not authenticate using  
PPPoE until data is transmitted to the network.  
Troubleshoot Internet Browsing  
If your Trek can obtain an IP address but your computer cannot load any web pages from the  
Internet, check the following:  
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.  
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Typically, your ISP provides the addresses of one or two DNS servers for your use. If you  
entered a DNS address during the Trek’s configuration, restart your computer.  
Alternatively, you can configure your computer manually with a DNS address, as  
explained in the documentation for your computer.  
Your computer might not have the Trek configured as its default gateway.  
Reboot the computer, and verify that the Trek address (www.routerlogin.net) is listed by  
your computer as the default gateway address.  
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 Trek. You might need to go to Internet Explorer and select  
Tools > Internet Options, click the Connections tab, and select the Never dial a  
connection radio button.  
Changes Not Saved  
If the Trek does not save the changes you make in the Trek interface, do the following:  
When entering configuration settings, always click the Apply button before moving 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 browser’s cache.  
Incorrect Date or Time  
To display the current date and time:  
1. Launch your browser from a computer or wireless device that is connected to the Trek.  
2. Enter www.routerlogin.net or www.routerlogin.com in the web browser address bar.  
The login screen displays.  
3. Enter the Trek user name and password.  
The user name is admin. The default password is password. The user name and  
password are case-sensitive.  
4. Click the OK button.  
The BASIC Home screen displays.  
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5. Select ADVANCED > Security > Schedule.  
The Trek uses the Network Time Protocol (NTP) to obtain the current time from one of  
several network time servers on the Internet. Each entry in the log is stamped with the  
date and time of day. For more information about the Logs screen, see Specify Log  
Problems with the date and time function can include the following:  
Date shown is January 1, 2000. This means the Trek has not successfully reached a  
network time server. Check that your Internet access is configured correctly. If you  
have finished setting up the Trek, wait at least five minutes, and check the date and  
time again.  
Time is off by one hour. The Trek does not automatically sense daylight saving time.  
In the Schedule screen, select the Automatically adjust for daylight savings time  
check box.  
Wireless Connectivity  
If you are having trouble connecting wirelessly to the Trek, check the following to try to isolate  
the problem:  
Does the wireless device or computer that you are using find your wireless network?  
If not, check to see of the WiFi LED is lit. If it is not, you can check to see if the Enable  
Wireless Router Radio check box on the Advanced Wireless Setting screen is selected.  
Log in to the Trek with an Ethernet cable to check this setting. For more information, see  
If you disabled the Trek’s SSID broadcast, your wireless network is hidden and does not  
show up in your wireless client’s scanning list. (By default, SSID broadcast is enabled.)  
Does your wireless device support the security that you are using for your wireless  
network? For example, does your wireless device support WPA2 security?  
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If not, then you must change the security of the Trek to match the security that is  
WARNING:  
NETGEAR recommends that you use the WPA2 wireless security  
option. Do not disable wireless security!  
If your wireless device does not support WPA2 security, you might want to consider  
upgrading your wireless device to a newer model.  
If you want to view the wireless settings for the Trek, use an Ethernet cable to connect a  
computer to a LAN port on the Trek. Then log in to the Trek and select BASIC >  
Note: Be sure to click the Apply button if you make changes.  
If your wireless device finds your network, but the signal strength is weak, check these  
conditions:  
Is your Trek too far from your computer, or too close? Place your computer near the Trek,  
but at least 6 feet away, and see whether the signal strength improves.  
Is your wireless signal blocked by objects between the Trek and your computer?  
Restore the Factory Settings and Password  
To restore the factory settings, erasing the current configuration, and changing the Trek’s  
administration password back to password, you can do either of the following:  
Use the Erase function of the Trek (see Erase the Current Configuration Settings on  
Use the Reset button. See Factory Settings on page 139. If you restore the factory  
settings and the Trek fails to restart, or the green Power LED continues to blink, the unit  
might be defective. If the error persists, you might have a hardware problem. Contact  
technical support at www.netgear.com/support.  
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 easily  
troubleshoot a network by using the ping utility in your computer or workstation.  
Troubleshooting  
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Trek N300 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000  
Test the LAN Path to Your Trek  
You can ping the Trek from your computer to verify that the LAN path to your Trek is set up  
correctly.  
To ping the Trek from a running Windows computer:  
1. From the Windows toolbar, select Start > Run.  
2. In the field provided, type ping followed by the IP address of the Trek, 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  
For a wired connection, make sure that your computer is connected to the correct  
Ethernet port on the Trek.  
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 Trek 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, select Start > 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 the examples shown in Test the LAN Path to  
Your Trek on page 136 are displayed. If you do not receive replies, check the following:  
Troubleshooting  
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Trek N300 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000  
Check that your computer has the IP address of your Trek listed as the default gateway. If  
the IP configuration of your computer is assigned by DHCP, this information is not visible  
in your computer’s Network Control Panel. Verify that the IP address of the Trek 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 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 Setup 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. If your ISP additionally restricts access to the MAC address of a single  
computer connected to that modem, configure your Trek to “clone” or “spoof” the MAC  
address from the authorized computer.  
Troubleshooting  
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A.  
Supplemental Information  
A
View the Trek specs  
This appendix covers the following topics:  
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Trek N300 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000  
Factory Settings  
You can return the Trek to its factory settings. Use the end of a paper clip or a similar object  
to press and hold the Reset button for at least seven seconds. The Trek resets, and returns  
to the factory configuration settings shown in the following table.  
Table 3. Factory default settings  
Feature  
Default Behavior  
Router login  
User login URL  
User name (case-sensitive)  
Login password (case-sensitive)  
WAN MAC address  
WAN MTU size  
Port speed  
admin (printed on product label)  
password (printed on product label)  
Use default hardware address  
1500  
Internet  
connection  
10/100 Mbps Autosensing  
192.168.168.1 (printed on product label)  
255.255.255.0  
Local network  
(LAN)  
LAN IP  
Subnet mask  
DHCP server  
Enabled  
DHCP range  
192.168.168.2 to 192.168.168.200  
Enabled  
Allow a registrar to configure this  
router  
DHCP starting IP address  
DHCP ending IP address  
DMZ  
192.168.168.2  
192.168.168.200  
Disabled  
Time zone  
GMT-8 for NA  
GMT+1 for GR, PE, UK  
GMT+4 for RU  
GMT+7 for PR  
GMT+10 for AU  
Time zone adjusted for daylight  
saving time  
Disabled  
SNMP  
Disabled  
Firewall  
Inbound (communications coming Disabled (except traffic on port 80, the HTTP port)  
in from the Internet)  
Outbound (communications going Enabled (all)  
out to the Internet)  
Source MAC filtering  
Disabled  
Supplemental Information  
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Trek N300 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000  
Table 3. Factory default settings (continued)  
Feature  
Default Behavior  
Wireless  
Wireless communication  
Preset SSID name  
Enabled  
See Trek label  
Security option password  
Broadcast SSID  
Preset password (see Trek label)  
Enabled  
Auto  
Transmission speed  
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.  
Country/region  
RF channel  
United States in the US; otherwise, varies by region  
2.4 GHz: Auto  
Up to 300 Mbps  
Best  
Operating mode  
Data rate  
Output power  
Full  
Technical Specifications  
Table 4. PR2000 Trek specifications  
Feature  
Description  
Data and routing protocols  
TCP/IP, RIP-1, RIP-2, DHCP, PPPoE, PPTP, Bigpond, Dynamic DNS, UPnP,  
and SMB  
Power adapter  
No power adapter.  
Input alternating current: 100–240V 50–60 Hz, 0.3A  
Dimensions  
3.39 in. x 3.31 in. x 1.30 in. (86.5 mm x 86.2 mm x 32 mm)  
0.355 lb (161 g), excluding plug  
Weight  
Operating temperature  
Operating humidity  
Electromagnetic emissions  
0° to 40°C (32º to 104ºF)  
90% maximum relative humidity, noncondensing  
FCC Part 15 Class B  
VCCI Class B  
EN 55 022 (CISPR 22), Class B  
LAN  
10BASE-T or 100BASE-Tx, RJ-45  
10BASE-T or 100BASE-Tx, RJ-45  
WAN  
Supplemental Information  
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Trek N300 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000  
Table 4. PR2000 Trek specifications (continued)  
Feature  
Description  
Wireless  
Maximum wireless signal rate complies with the IEEE 802.11 standard. See the  
entry for Transmission speed in Table 3 on page 139.  
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 50–70 nodes).  
Operating frequency range  
2.4 GHz  
2.412–2.462 GHz (US)  
2.412–2.472 GHz (Japan)  
2.412–2.472 GHz (Europe ETSI)  
802.11 security  
WPA-PSK, WPA2-PSK, WEP, and WPA/WPA2 PSK.  
Supplemental Information  
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Index  
default factory settings  
list of 139  
restoring 105  
default gateway 99  
denial of service (DoS) attacks 50  
denial of service (DoS) protection 87  
devices, attached 44  
DHCP server 56, 99  
DMZ server 51  
A
access control  
turning on 114  
access, remote 119  
active static route 118  
address reservation 58  
alerts, emailing 91  
ALG (Application Layer Gateway) 51  
applications, QoS for 63  
approved USB devices 69, 76  
attached devices 44  
authentication, required by mail server 92  
automatic firmware checking 106  
automatic Internet connection 49  
DNS addresses  
primary 36, 38  
secondary 36, 38  
troubleshooting 131  
viewing 96, 99  
DoS (denial of service) attacks 50  
Dynamic DNS 115  
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) 56  
DynDNS.org 115  
B
backing up configuration 104, 105, 106  
bandwidth control, QoS 62  
blocking services 88  
E
box contents 7  
bridge, WiFi, setting up 20  
electromagnetic emissions 140  
email notices 91  
encryption keys 42  
erasing configuration 105  
Ethernet cables, checking 127  
C
cables, checking 127  
changes not saved, router 133  
configuration file 104  
connecting wirelessly  
operating range 7  
F
factory default settings  
list of 139  
to hotspot 14  
restoring 105  
connection status 98  
country setting 48  
crossover cable 128  
CTS/RTS Threshold 109  
file sharing 77  
firmware version 95  
firmware, upgrading 26, 106  
fragmentation length 109  
fragmented data packets 53  
D
G
data packets, fragmented 53  
date and time 134  
gateway IP address 36, 38  
gateway, default 99  
genie, NETGEAR  
daylight saving time 134  
default DMZ server 51  
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Trek N300 Travel Router and Range Extender PR2000  
setup, initial 24  
MTU (maximum transmit unit) size 53  
using after installation 25  
multicasting 56  
H
N
hardware version 95  
NAT (Network Address Translation) 51  
NETGEAR genie  
host name 35  
setup, initial 24  
using after installation 25  
Network Time Protocol (NTP) 134  
network, correct settings, checking 127  
network, restarting 127  
I
IGMP proxy 51  
Internet connection  
setting up 34, 36, 39  
status 98  
troubleshooting 25, 130  
Internet LED  
O
online games, QoS for 63  
open NAT 51  
description 10  
troubleshooting 128  
outgoing mail server 91  
Internet port  
Setup Wizard 49  
viewing settings 95  
Internet service provider (ISP) 23  
Internet services, blocking access 88  
IP addresses  
P
packets  
fragmented 53  
transmitted and received 98  
passphrase, WPA security 43  
password  
DHCP 23  
gateway 36, 38  
reserved 56, 58  
viewing 95  
changing 26  
recovering 27  
restoring 135  
photos, sharing 78  
ping  
L
LAN port, viewing settings 95  
LAN setup 54  
responding to 51  
troubleshooting 136  
language setting 48  
large files, sharing 78  
lease, DHCP 99  
LEDs  
Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol (PPTP), connection  
status 100  
port filtering 88  
port numbers 88  
described 10  
port status, viewing 98  
positioning the router 7  
Power LED  
troubleshooting 127  
logging in 23, 25  
logs 91  
description 10  
troubleshooting 128  
PPPoE (PPP over Ethernet) 100, 131  
PPTP (Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol), connection  
status 100  
Preamble mode 109  
preset security 40  
passphrase 43  
pre-shared key 42  
M
MAC address, QoS for 64  
mail server, outgoing 91  
maintenance settings 93  
managing router remotely 119  
maximum transmit unit (MTU) size 53  
metric values, static routes 118  
mixed mode security options 43  
primary DNS addresses 36, 38  
printing files and photos 78  
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prioritizing traffic 61  
private static route 118  
public WiFi hotspots 14  
T
technical support 2  
Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP) 42  
time of day 134  
trademarks 2  
traffic  
Q
QoS (Quality of Service) 60–??  
prioritizing 61  
statistics, viewing 97  
traffic metering 122  
transmitted packets 98  
troubleshooting 126, 129, 133, 134  
R
range extender 16  
range of wireless connections 7  
ReadySHARE access 68, 81  
received packets 98  
recovering administrative password 27  
releasing and renewing connection status 100  
remote management 119  
reserved IP addresses 56, 58  
restarting network 127  
U
Universal Plug and Play (UPnP) 121  
up time, system 97  
upgrading firmware 26, 106  
uplink bandwidth 62  
USB  
restoring default factory settings 105, 135  
RIP (Router Information Protocol)  
setting up 56  
advanced configuration 70  
drive requirements 68  
file sharing 77  
static routes 118  
ReadySHARE access 68, 81  
remote computer connection 80  
specifying approved devices 76  
unmounting USB drive 68  
USB devices, approved 69, 76  
USB LED  
router status, viewing 94  
S
scheduling service blocking 90  
secondary DNS addresses 36, 38  
secured NAT 51  
description 11  
user-defined services 88  
security 40, 42, 87  
security options 42  
security PIN 31  
sending logs by email 91  
services blocking 88  
V
versions, firmware, hardware, and language 95  
VoIP (Voice over IP) 51  
Session Initiation Protocol Application Layer Gateway (SIP  
ALG) 51  
W
setting up Trek 24, 48  
Setup Wizard 48, 49  
sharing files 77  
SIP ALG (Session Initiation Protocol Application Layer  
Gateway) 51  
SMTP server 91  
software version 95  
SSID, described 41  
static routes 116  
statistics, traffic 97  
system up time 97  
WAN IP address, troubleshooting 130  
WAN port, viewing settings 95  
WAN setup 50  
WiFi bridge, setting up 20  
WiFi hotspot, connecting to 14  
WiFi LED  
description 11  
troubleshooting 128, 130  
WiFi LED, troubleshooting 129  
Wi-Fi Multimedia (WMM) 60  
Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS)  
devices, adding 30, 31  
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keep existing settings 112  
WiFi range extender 16  
Wireless Card Access List 114  
wireless channel 41  
wireless connections  
operating range 7  
troubleshooting 134  
wireless devices, adding to the network 29  
wireless mode 41  
wireless network name (SSID) 41  
wireless network settings 41  
wireless security options 42  
wireless settings  
basic 40  
checking for correct 127  
SSID broadcast 41  
viewing 100  
WMM (Wi-Fi Multimedia) 60  
WPA encryption 42  
WPA2 encryption 42  
WPA2-PSK encryption 42, 43  
WPA-PSK/WPA2-PSK mixed mode 43  
WPS-PSK encryption 43  
WPS-PSK+ WPA2-PSK encryption 43  
wrong date or time 134  
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