Hi Sabahattin,

Thank you for this advice.  As you rightly point out the last thing I want is 
to slow down my network.  The reason I purchased Netgear Nighthawk was in order 
to improve the performance of my network.  As the number of devices/computers 
has increased in my home over the last few years, I have noticed AirPort 
Extreme dropping connections a lot and it became a nuisance.  Whilst it still 
works I thought I’d try something more modern and Nighthawk seemed like a very 
good and affordable proposition.  I did however forget the compatibility 
problems with Apple products.  interestingly, I managed to configure my Airport 
Express to join the new Netgear as main router network in bridge mode, which 
allows me to stream music to my Sonos using Airfoil app so that’s good so far.  
I failed entirely with AirPort Extreme 6th generation.  I even worked with an 
Apple support chap and he wasn’t able to make it work either.  Ethernet is not 
an option for me as, well, you know people you live with are a bit fussy and to 
be honest I’d need meters of ethernet cable to achieve what I want.  But I did 
manage to configure the older AirPort Extreme 5th generation to join my wifi 
network as Bridge which allows me at least to use my usb printer connected to 
it remotely.  What I have lost - and it is annoying - is the use of my WD My 
Cloud network drive which used to be attached to AirPort Extreme 5th generation 
ethernet port and now of course my mac doesn’t see it.

You mentioned getting possibly a different extender.  Would you have a 
suggestion as to what I might need in order to use a usb printer, a couple of 
usb external drives and WD my Cloud in order for these to work and be 
recognizable by my mac?  Would it make sense to get a Netgear extender?  I’m 
very unschooled in computer language, and although I’ve learnt an awful lot 
using macs and getting into trouble for years, I’m still very very amateurish.  
So I’d welcome any suggestions for a wifi extender with usb and ethernet ports 
that would play nicely with Netgear Nighthawk.  By the way, mine is Nighthawk 
x6 r8000.  The Netgear genie is not accessible with voiceover but the web 
interface works.

Thanks again and forgive my rather non-technical language.

Andrew

> On 4 Feb 2020, at 20:13, 'Sabahattin Gucukoglu' via MacVisionaries 
> <macvisionaries@googlegroups.com> wrote:
> 
> Unfortunately, the answer is, “I’m sorry Andrew, I’m afraid I can’t do that.”
> 
> The problem is that the AirPort Express supports the STA (station) proxy 
> mode, wherein each Ethernet and Wi-Fi device connected to the extension is 
> proxied to your existing network as a Wi-Fi station itself. This is how most 
> “repeater” products still work. It’s particularly awesome when you’ve got an 
> Ethernet-only device and want it talking to your wireless network.
> 
> The Time Capsule and Extreme never had this functionality. Instead, you use 
> WDS (Wireless Distribution System) if you want a wireless backbone. That 
> requires support from both sides of the bridge, but worse, it impairs 
> performance for anybody connected to the extender, by exactly half for every 
> traversal through a bridge.
> 
> If you can get your Netgear to use WDS, that’s the way. Otherwise you’ll have 
> to use an Ethernet backbone or purchase a different extender. Sorry about 
> that.  Ethernet is always preferable, of course, but it’s not always 
> practical.
> 
> The way that you get to the setup mode of the Extreme is to reset it. When 
> you join the network either on macOS or in iOS, you’ll get a special 
> AirPort-specific setup regime.
> 
> I will miss my AirPort product when it finally dies. But I think I’ll be 
> moving to Netgear’s Nighthawk for a simple base station arrangement in the 
> traditional style. The Time Capsule is rendered obsolete as soon as the 
> internal hard disk dies, and that’s already happened to me once. Time to move 
> on, I fancy, and remember the good times.
> 
> Cheers,
> Sabahattin
> 
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