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I suggest some additional analysis at time of failure.
Ideally using a PC connected by ethernet to one of your routers, take a baseline so you know what it's like when it's working by pinging all your routers and checking they all respond. For good measure you could also try pinging a (Wi-Fi) client connected to each router to verify the client are happy to answer ping when working normally (these days not everything answers ping by design.)
Then when next failure occurs, repeat the tests and see what answers and what doesn't.
Is your SkyQ equipment connected to the same network and if so, is it by ethernet, Wi-Fi or both..?
Does any of the the SkyQ equipment host a DHCP Server (note "Server" not "Client") - if so it could be that you are getting IP address conflicts? At time of failure, have a look at a (failing) client's IP address and see if it is correct - ie it came from you HH and not elsewhere. If you have DHCP Servers in your SkyQ equipment, disable their DHCP Servers - the only DHCP Server you should have active is the one in your ISP connected router (HH if I've been following the conversations correctly.)
We might have a look at Wi-Fi radio channel assignment, but let's check that IP is correctly configured first and drill into what's working and what isn't in failure mode. |
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