Hi, Adding to what others have said..... Done plenty of these. Is it the older round dish or the newer square one? - Old round dish one Discard the starlink router entirely, just use the PoE injector. Plug into mikrotik WAN and with DHCP client and appropriate NAT rule on this port and away you go. - new square dish one Obviously need the additional ethernet adapter. Set starlink router in Bypass mode. Plug into mikrotik WAN and with DHCP client and appropriate NAT rule on this port and away you go. Andrew -----Original Message----- From: Public <public-bounces@talk.mikrotik.com.au> On Behalf Of Russell Hurren Sent: Monday, October 9, 2023 4:34 PM To: MikroTik Australia Public List <public@talk.mikrotik.com.au> Subject: Re: [MT-AU Public] Mikrotik and Starlink My father-in-law has one, but I haven't seen it in person yet. If it's the standard Starlink, it has a built-in WiFi router and no Ethernet. You need to purchase the Ethernet adapter and enable bypass mode using the mobile app, and then it's straight-forward - plug it into the router and use the dhcp client. Shouldn't be difficult, but as I say, I haven't done it yet - I'll set it up next time I'm in Albany, probably Christmas time. -----Original Message----- From: Public <public-bounces@talk.mikrotik.com.au> On Behalf Of Karl Auer Sent: Monday, October 9, 2023 4:10 PM To: MikroTik Public <public@talk.mikrotik.com.au> Subject: [MT-AU Public] Mikrotik and Starlink Wondering if anyone has any tips here. A client has acquired a company whose office has a Starlink connection. This client also has an existing office with an NBN connection. The latter is connected to a Mikrotik that does plain old DHCP to get its WAN address from the NPN. Now the client wants to use the acquired company's office instead. They want to move the Mikrotik there and keep more or less the same network behind it that they have now. They've done the obvious thing and just plugged the WAN interface on the Mikrotik into an Ethernet port on the Starlink router, but no go. "No go" in this case means that PCs on the inside network don't have Internet access, and that's as far as they know how to go. I have never seen the new office or the Starlink router (or any Starlink routers). I have no idea if they connected the right Mikrotik interface to it. In fact I don't even know if the port on the Starlink router is in fact an Ethernet port. My searching on the subject finds numerous articles saying that Starlink routers have no Ethernet ports, that additional hardware must be purchased from Starlink and talking about "Bypass Mode", none of which is inspiring... Anyway, if anybody has run a small network behind Mikrotik using a Starlink router as the WAN connnection can share any info, that'd be great. Many thanks in advance, K. -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Karl Auer (kauer@nullarbor.com.au) work +61 2 64957435 http://www.nullarbor.com.au mobile +61 428 957160 _______________________________________________ Public mailing list Public@talk.mikrotik.com.au http://talk.mikrotik.com.au/mailman/listinfo/public_talk.mikrotik.com.au _______________________________________________ Public mailing list Public@talk.mikrotik.com.au http://talk.mikrotik.com.au/mailman/listinfo/public_talk.mikrotik.com.au