smcctv 0 Posted April 11, 2014 Hi guys, I have a customer where i have installed x3 ip cameras to a NVR unit. All working fine. The question i have is around the port forwarding. He has a setup where the BT fibre router has only one cat 5 connection. This plugs into his Orange brightbox wireless router which has x4 ethernet ports. The CCTV NVR is plugged into this. Do i configure port forwarding at the BT router or Orange router or both? Thanks confused.com Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ssnapier 0 Posted April 11, 2014 The orange router most likely. I am betting that the BT modem is setup just to be a bridge. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
smcctv 0 Posted April 12, 2014 I have port forwarded the Orange router but have had no joy as yet. I will port forward port 80, but my understanding is that port 80 is usually open by default. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
qrcctv 0 Posted April 15, 2014 It really depends. You can not have 2 routers on one internet connection. So one must be acting as switch or something. But the BT router should be the main router as its the only one that has a connection to the outside work. I would setup port forwarding on the BT router. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
smcctv 0 Posted April 25, 2014 Ok, let me try setting up the port forward on the BT router side and will keep you updated next week. Many Thanks guys. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ssnapier 0 Posted April 25, 2014 It really depends. You can not have 2 routers on one internet connection. Not true, it just takes more work to do port forwarding. I have 2 routers at my office and you just have to forward the ports from the public facing router to the internal router and then forward from the internal router to the DVR or whatever you are using (IP camera, home server, slingbox, whatever). Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
tomcctv 190 Posted April 26, 2014 Hi. Bit of a sales pitch from BT They call if fibre but it's only fibre from exchange to sub and from sub station to home it's on copper. ( hight speed adsl) So it is just a matter of port forward. Orange (EE) can be expensive if your customer dose not have the right broadband pack So check if true unlimited Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Numb-nuts 1 Posted April 27, 2014 I have a customer on Chess Broadband (fibre) and he gets very good results, the router is a netgear and reasonably easy to set up after a little tinkering. i.e reserve the DVR's IP address then restart and do the port forwarding. Chess Broadband technical support line are rather helpful too, after initially getting permission from the account holder. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites