| It sounds like you expect to link to a mesh node like you link to a normal Wi-Fi Access Point.  A WRT54G loaded with HSMM-MESH firmware and operating as a mess node, is not an Access Point. A mesh node is not an AP.  They talk different protocols. An Access Point communicates with a normal Wi-Fi equipped laptop PC, for example in Infrastructure mode.  This is a very specific protocol.  HSMM-MESH nodes communicate using OLSR protocol, which is very different. At the very lowest level you can get a RF link from your windows laptop Wi-Fi device, but since you are not talking OLSR mesh protocol, you do not pass useful data. A mesh node is not an Access Point.  They are very different.  When you changed the firmware, you changed the operation of the radio in the WRT54G.  HSMM-MESH mesh nodes only talk to like configured mesh nodes.  Common Wi-Fi Access Points are very different.   You need a minimum of 2 mesh nodes to pass mesh data.  You plug in your PC to one of the wired LAN ports on the back of a mesh node, and you can talk to devices on the LA N ports of another mesh node, if properly configured.  So when properly set up, 2 mesh nodes effectively take the place of a long CAT-5 cable. What is going out the RF side of the mesh nodes, is a very different protocol than what your normal Wi-Fi devices use, and you should not expect to directly link common Wi-Fi devices to the RF side of a mesh node. You might want to compare a Wi-Fi Access Point running Infrastructure protocol and a mesh node running OLSR mesh protocol to see how the systems differ. I hope this is helpful. -Glenn KD5MFW |