Download Print this page
I-CAN Thunder AX 3600 User Manual

I-CAN Thunder AX 3600 User Manual

Wifi 6 ultra fast home gateway

Advertisement

Quick Links

Advertisement

loading
Need help?

Need help?

Do you have a question about the Thunder AX 3600 and is the answer not in the manual?

Questions and answers

Subscribe to Our Youtube Channel

Summary of Contents for I-CAN Thunder AX 3600

  • Page 2 SAFETY INFORMATION AND WARNINGS ON THE PRODUCT Before any operation is performed, please read the operation instructions and precautions Restrictions for use carefully in order to minimize the possibility of accidents. When you use this product you shall always respect basic safety measures in order to In all EU member states operation of 5150-5350 MHz is restricted to indoor use only.
  • Page 3 UNPACKING YOUR WI-FI 6 ULTRA FAST HOME GATEWAY Thunder Wi-Fi 6 Ultra Fast Home Gateway Power Supply DSL Splitter Grey DSL Cable Yellow Ethernet Cable Red Ethernet Cable Safety Flyer Quck Installation Guide...
  • Page 4 CONNECTIONS DUAL-BAND WI-FI 5 GHz 2.4 GHz Camera, USB Key, Printer, HDD Gaming console Tablet, Smartphone, Notebook POWER SUPPLY INTERNET DSL, Fiber PHONES ETHERNET VoIP, Analogue PC, TV, Gaming console, NAS, Printer...
  • Page 5 Configuration Wizard This chapter explains how to use the Configuration Wizard, NOTE: ƒ which helps the user to quickly personalize the router and set up Information needed for connecting to the Internet is typically a connection to the Internet. provided by the ISP at the time a service subscription is The Wizard can be launched by selecting Wizard in the drop- finalized.
  • Page 6 Step 1 – Selecting a Language The Welcome screen will appear (see Figure 1), showing the Figure 1. First Configuration Wizard - Language Selection i-CAN logo and the router model name. To select a language: Click ARROW DOWN next to the language name to display the list of available languages.
  • Page 7 Step 2 – Login and Password Configuration Next, mandatory step is user Login and Password configuration Figure 2. First Configuration Wizard – User Configuration as shown on the tab Configure User (see Figure 2). This step allows to create User’s Login and Password for router access.
  • Page 8 Step 3 – Connect to the Internet Figure 3. First Configuration Wizard – Internet connection set up A connection to the Internet can be set up by choosing one of the following two options (see Figure 3): ■ Predefined. A list of pre-configured connections is shown, sorted by country and type.
  • Page 9 Step 4 – Configure Voice over IP Service As for the Internet connection setup, the configuration param- Figure 4. First Configuration Wizard – Voice Service eters to be specified in this step (see Figure 4) are typically pro- vided by, or attainable from, the Internet Service Provider, after applying for a Voice over IP service subscription.
  • Page 10 Step 5 – Wi-Fi Network Configuration This step allows to specify the Wi-Fi network name (SSID) and Figure 5. First Configuration Wizard – Wi-Fi Access Point password by performing the following actions (refer to Figure 5) Enter the name to be assigned to the network (SSID) Enter the password Retype the password When all the required information has been specified, the button...
  • Page 11 Step 6 – Personal Data Collection The next step allows to express your consent (refer to Figure 6) Figure 6. First Configuration Wizard – Personal Data to collecting and transferring diagnostic data from the router to management system if needed. Data collection acceptance is optional, users can accept (enabling button in the menu) or discard.
  • Page 12 Step 7 - Summary The Summary page will be shown listing all device settings Figure 7. First Configuration Wizard - Summary specified during the procedure (see Figure 7). Click Back to revisit the previous steps if any setting needs to be changed or Apply to confirm the configuration.
  • Page 13 Step 8 – Firmware Upgrade After displaying the Summary page containing all device settings Figure 8. First Configuration Wizard – Firmware Upgrade specified during the procedure and carrying out auto-configura- tion in accordance with these settings, a page with information about the availability of the Firmware upgrade may appear (see Figure 8).
  • Page 14 Upon successful application of all configuration parameters, the Wizard will close, and the Home page will be displayed (see Figure 9). A detailed description of the Home page content is provided in Section 3. Figure 9. Home page...
  • Page 15 Ensure that the router is switched on. Open a web browser on a device connected to the router. Enter the router’s IP address (default: http://192.168.1.1) or router name (i-can.thunder) in the browser address field (see Figure 10). The Login page will show up (see Figure 11).
  • Page 16 Upon successful login, the Home page is displayed NOTE: ƒ User Interface sessions are automatically terminated after a The Home screen provides a complete overview of the router’s predefined inactivity timeout. The Login page will be shown status and configuration settings. again to allow for user re-authentication.
  • Page 17 Menu The Menu panel (see Figure 13) is displayed on the screen left Figure 13. Menu side by clicking the Menu icon in the Home page. The panel includes a number of items corresponding to actions that can be performed on the device or the device configuration pages, namely ■...
  • Page 18 3.1 Logout The Logout button (Figure 14) allows to log out from the ongo- Figure 14. Logout button ing GUI session. Click on the Menu icon in the Home page to display the Menu. Click the Logout button.
  • Page 19 3.2 Language The Language menu entry allows to select the language used in Figure 15. Language settings the GUI. To change the current language: Click on the Menu icon in the Home page to display the Menu. Click the ARROW DOWN icon next to the language name. to display the language drop-down menu (see Figure 15).
  • Page 20 3.3 Restore Default Settings The Restore Default Settings panel allows, upon confirmation, Figure 16. Restore Default Settings panel to reset the router to its factory default configuration. WARNING: ƒ This action will cause the current router configuration to be lost. To restore factory default settings: Click on the Menu icon in the Home page to display...
  • Page 21 3.4 Change Password The Change Password panel (Figure 17) allows to change the Figure 17. Change Password panel password for the user account. To change the password: Click on the Menu icon in the Home page to display the Menu. Click Change Password menu entry: a page will appear where the password can be modified (see Figure 17).
  • Page 22 3.5 Reboot The Reboot panel allows, upon confirmation, to reboot the Figure 18. Reboot panel router. To reboot the router: Click on the Menu icon in the Home page to display the Menu. Click Reboot menu entry: a page will appear displaying a notification about the reboot process (see Figure 18).
  • Page 23 3.6 Wizard The Wizard entry in the Menu panel restarts the configuration Wizard, described in Section 1. NOTE: ƒ The value displayed for the various configuration parameters that can be set in Wizard pages is the one currently applied. When the Wizard is run for the first time, this will correspond to the value set as factory default.
  • Page 24 3.7 Firmware Upgrade The Firmware Upgrade panel allows uploading and executing Figure 19. Firmware Upgrade panel a new firmware image, by selecting the file that contains the im- age from a location in the Home Network or the Internet. To upgrade the firmware: Click on the Menu icon in the Home page to display the Menu.
  • Page 25 Home Page ■ After having successfully logged in, the Home page will be Wi-Fi-Guest (see Section 4.4 for more information) displayed (see Figure 12). Radio switch-on / switch-off toggle ƒ The page consists of Menu tiles, each showing an overview of Network name (SSID) ƒ...
  • Page 26 ■ Interfaces (see Section 4.7 for more information) Figure 12. Home Page Type, Status, Downlink and Uplink speed of the Physical Link ƒ to ISP Status, speed, and mode of the WAN interface ƒ Status of LAN interfaces and connected ports ƒ...
  • Page 27 4.1 Configuration pages structure As written in the previous Section, clicking a tile in the Home When one or more configuration parameters are changed in a page, and provided the specified values are valid, the APPLY page will cause a tile-specific page to be displayed. button Figure 21 illustrates an example screen with information appear- ing after clicking the Internet tile.
  • Page 28 If invalid or incomplete settings have been specified for at least Figure 22. Discard changes confirmation pop-up one parameter, the button will be shown greyed out and disabled until such settings have been corrected. Any change made in the page will become effective only after the APPLY button has been clicked.
  • Page 29 4.2 Internet The Internet tile in the Home page (see Figure 12) displays Figure 25. Internet page the current status of the connection with the Internet, namely whether or not the physical link is up or down, whether a public IP address has or not been assigned to the router, and, if the link is fully working, the current Uplink and Download speed.
  • Page 30 Physical Link (Figure 26) Figure 26. Physical Link information Status The status of Internet connection at physical layer: “Up” means the connection active, “Down” means the connection is not active. Active Link The technology used by the physical link e.g., xDSL, Ethernet,.
  • Page 31 IP Link (Figure 28) Figure 28. IP Link information Status The current status of Internet connection at IP layer: “Up” means that the router has received from the ISP enough information (IP address, DNS server address) to navigate the Internet, “Down”...
  • Page 32 If there is no Internet connection, additional menu entries will be Figure 30. Internet Disconnected shown - Troubleshooting (see Figure 30). Click it to go directly to the Troubleshooting section.
  • Page 33 4.3 Wi-Fi and Wi-Fi Guest The Wi-Fi and Wi-fi Guest tiles in the Home page (see Figure Figure 31. Wi-Fi Page 12) provide basic status information about the wireless network managed by the router: wireless network name (SSID) ƒ number of connected devices ƒ...
  • Page 34 Access section (Wi-Fi and Wi-fi Guest) Figure 32. Wi-Fi Access section (Common 2.4 / 5GHz) 2.4 / 5 GHz Switches between “Common 2.4 / 5GHz” Network (Figure 32 - shortened as “Common” in the Setting following) and “Separate 2.4 and 5GHz” Mode (Figure 33 - “Separate”) setting modes for the 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands:...
  • Page 35 Settings section (Figure 34): Figure 34. Wi-Fi Settings section (Separate 2.4 and 5GHz) Band Steering (ON/OFF slider button) Hide SSID Selects whether or not the SSID is ad- (ON/OFF slider button) vertised to Wi-Fi client devices: choose ON to hide the SSID, OFF to reveal it. Client isolation When set to OFF, wireless clients can (ON/OFF slider button)
  • Page 36 Figure 35. Wi-Fi Settings section (Manual channel selection) Channel Displays, and allows to change, the Wi-Fi radio channel in use in each band (see Figure 35). The options shown when clicking ARROW DOWN depend on band (2.4 GHz or 5 GHz): 2.4 GHz: “Auto”, “1”...
  • Page 37 Figure 36. Wi-Fi Settings section (Channel Width selection) Preferred Displays, and allows to change, the band- Channel Width width of the Wi-Fi radio channel in use by each network. The options shown when clicking ARROW DOWN depend on the router model and the network band (2.4 GHz or 5 GHz): 2.4 GHz: “Auto”, “20”, “40”...
  • Page 38 4.4 Wi-Fi Guest The Wi-fi Guest tile in the Home page (see Figure 12) provides Figure 31. Wi-Fi Guest Page basic status information about the Guest wireless network man- aged by the router: wireless network name (SSID) ƒ number of connected devices ƒ...
  • Page 39 Access section Figure 32. Wi-Fi Access section (Common 2.4 / 5GHz) 2.4 / 5 GHz Switches between “Common 2.4 / Network Setting 5GHz” (Figure 32 - shortened as “Com- Mode mon” in the following) and “Separate (drop-down menu 2.4 and 5GHz” (Figure 33 - “Separate”) on the page right setting modes for the 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz top)
  • Page 40 Settings section (Figure 34): Figure 34. Wi-Fi Settings section (Separate 2.4 and 5GHz) Auto-disable timeout Selects whether or not timeout for (drop-down menu) network availability with options: Never / End of today / End of Tomor- row. Client isolation When set to OFF, wireless clients (ON/OFF slider button) can see each other as well as other devices in the Home Network and...
  • Page 41 4.5 Home Network Home Network tile in the Home page (see Figure 12) reports Figure 37. Home Network the number of home network devices currently connected to the router, distinguished by the type of connection link (Wi-Fi, Wired or USB). Clicking on the Home Network tile brings up the Home Net- work page (see Figure 37).
  • Page 42 IP Settings section (Figure 38): Figure 38. Home Network - IP Settings section IP Address Displays, and allows to change, the private IP address assigned to the router in the Home Network. Subnet Displays, and allows to change, the range of Mask IP addresses that will be assigned to devices in the Home Network.
  • Page 43 Figure 40. Home Network – Dynamic DNS section Lease Time Displays, and allows to change, how long an IP address assigned by the DHCP server will remain valid: when such time expires, the server will automatically take care of renew- ing the address.
  • Page 44 Static Hosts section (Figure 41): Figure 41. Home Network – Static Hosts section Reserve IP Certain Home Network clients can be as- Address signed with a fixed IP address, chosen in the address range defined by the value of Start IP and End IP parameters in DHCP Settings section.
  • Page 45 Figure 44. Device MAC and IP addresses Selecting one of such device will show a card (Figure 44) that displays the device MAC address and, using ARROW RIGHT, allows changing its previously assigned IP address; clicking “Unselect” will revert the previous view.
  • Page 46 Devices section (Figure 46): The Device section provides a list of all Home Network devices Figure 46. Home Network – Devices section, Map tab currently connected to the router. The Map tab displays the devices in a map that graphically shows the type of device and type of connection with the router.
  • Page 47 The List tab (Figure 47) displays a textual list of devices, split in a Figure 47. Home Network – Devices section, List tab first part that shows those currently connected to the router (as done in Map tab) and a second part (“Off-line”), which shows devices that have been connected to the router in the past but which are currently disconnected.
  • Page 48 Clicking on a device icon (Map tab) or name (List tab) will open Figure 48. Device Details the “Device Details” card (Figure 48), that shows a number of device specific parameters. The card will also allow to reserve the IP address shown for the device through the “Reserve IP address”...
  • Page 49 USB Devices section (Figure 49): USB devices can be connected to USB port(s) on the router. Clicking on the icon or the name of an individual USB Device will open the tab with the Device Details (Figure 50), showing the type of connection of the device to the router, its current status, the name of the device and its capacity Figure 49.
  • Page 50 4.6 Telephony The Telephony tile in the Home page (see Figure 12) displays Figure 51. VoIP page whether or not the VoIP service has been configured. If the ser- vice is configured, it can be enabled or disabled via the ON/OFF slider button.
  • Page 51 Figure 52. Call List details...
  • Page 52 Configuration section (Figure 53): WARNING: ƒ VoIP configuration parameters depend on your VoIP provider Clicking this entry will display the list of phone lines configura- data, to be received on VoIP service activation. tion parameters, starting from number(s), line status and call status (Figure 54).
  • Page 53 4.7 Interfaces The Interfaces tile in the Home page (see Figure 12) shows a Figure 55. Interfaces – DSL status page synthetic view about the status of router connections toward the Internet and the Home Network. Clicking on the DSL tile, takes to the status page of the DSL interface (see Figure 55).
  • Page 54 Figure 57. Interfaces – Internet status page Figure 59. Interfaces – Wi-Fi (5 GHz) status page Figure 58. Interfaces – VoIP status page Figure 60. Interfaces – Wi-Fi (2.4 GHz) status page...
  • Page 55 4.8 System Clicking the System tile in the Home page (see Figure 12), takes Figure 61. System to the page with a set of additional action tiles (Figure 61). ■ Logging – review, filter and change settings for system logs collected by the device (Figure 62) ■...
  • Page 56 Figure 62. Logging - log page Figure 63. Reboot Figure 64. Factory Reset Figure 65. Backup Configuration...
  • Page 57 Figure 66. Load Configuration Figure 67. Firmware Upgrade Figure 68. Date / Time Figure 69. DLNA...
  • Page 58 USB Sharing service allows the content of one or more USB Figure 70. USB Sharing panel storage devices (USB memory stick, USB hard-disk) connected to the router’s USB port(s) to be accessible from client devices in the Home Network. Clicking the USB Sharing tile in the System page (see Figure 61), takes to the configuration section of USB devices (Figure 70).
  • Page 59 4.9 Security ■ Clicking the Security tile in the Home page (see Figure 12), User (see Figure 78) – configuration of access user password takes to the page with a set of additional action tiles (Figure 71). ■ Management (see Figure 79) - Clicking tile takes to the page with a set of additional Menu: ■...
  • Page 60 Figure 72. Firewall settings page Figure 74. Parental Control access page Figure 73. DMZ settings page Figure 75. VPN type selection...
  • Page 61 Figure 76. Port Mapping Figure 78. User Figure 77. Routing QoS Figure 79. Management...
  • Page 62 4.10 Diagnostic Clicking the Diagnostic tile in the Home page (see Figure 12), Figure 80. Diagnostic panel takes to a set of local diagnostic tools and information (see Figure 80): ■ Ping tool (see Figure 81) - page allowing you to define a set of parameters to launch a ping to an IP address to be speci- fied.
  • Page 63 Figure 81. Ping Figure 82. Download Figure 83. Upload Figure 84. Traceroute...
  • Page 64 Figure 85. Interfaces Summary page...
  • Page 65 Figure 86. Active Connections...
  • Page 66 EU DECLARATION OF CONFORMITY Waste packaging should be separated and delivered at the collection points in accordance with the local waste collection rules. Hereby, Advanced Digital Broadcast SA declares that the radio equipment is in compliance with Directives RED 2014/53/EU, RoHS 2011/65/EU & 2015/863/EU and ErP 2009/125/EC relevant implementing measures. DO NOT DISPOSE OF AS HOUSEHOLD UNSORTED WASTE The full text of the EU declaration of conformity may be obtained contacting ADB at https://www.adbglobal.com/contact/...