Short answer is no. So basically every interface on a router must be on a separate subnet. It defines this by the network address and subnet mask. Having 2 internet accesses on the same network range but different interfaces will not work correctly. Perhaps you could change one of them to a different network range? If not maybe the ISP could do this for you. A workaround I do not like, but has worked for some is to add another router in the mix to change one of the gateway IP's to a different subnet.
Ryan Rodrigue <http://www.aarelectronics.com/> Description: http://email.aaremail.net/AAR.png P.O. Box 4336 Chief Technical Manager Houma, LA 70361 A A R Electronics, Inc Phone (985) 876-4096 510 West Tunnel Blvd Phone (800) 649-7346 Houma, LA 70360 Fax (985) 853-0134 syst...@aaremail.com www.aarelectronics.com <http://www.aarelectronics.com/> From: list-boun...@lists.pfsense.org [mailto:list-boun...@lists.pfsense.org] On Behalf Of Andrew @ ATMlogic.ca Sent: Wednesday, August 08, 2012 11:13 AM To: 'pfSense support and discussion' Subject: [pfSense] Multiwan Just wondering a few things about multiwan. In this case what I am wondering is can I take multiple Wifi bridges funnel them into pf, and have one Lan connection that (from what I understand) does some basic round robin load balancing. I am aware this will give me some trouble on some websites. However I am also worried. will everything work out if the WAN ports have the same gateway? e.g. I will be getting an internal IP of 192.168.0.20, 0.102, 0.87 and then 1.101 for example, however all the 0.'s will have the same 0.1 gateway yet be totally different connections to the web. Not sure if that would matter. ---Andrew ATM Logic Never memorize something that you can Google
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