This is an old thread but since I just got a Pantech UML295 working on Verizon with an RB951G running 6.33.3:
First thing to know is that these are not like the USB 3G dongles of old -- they look to the attached computer/router like an Ethernet device conceptually rather than a serial port with PPP. The USB stick makes its own little NAT'ed network with DHCP server et al, just like a Hotspot/MiFi device would do, but the "network" exists only virtually between the USB host and the stick. Once you know this, everything becomes much clearer. The modem even has a web UI very similar to the MiFi devices.
So...here's all I had to do:
1. Configure the modem to "auto connect" mode. Mine was already configured this way but if not, you need to plug it into a laptop and change the config. RouterOS has no way to make it connect, afaik.
2. Insert a Verizon LTE SIM valid for "broadband" service. I used a SIM from a MiFi I already had, or you can get a SIM from Verizon, or pay their $$$ price for a modem device with SIM.
3. Plug the modem into the router, power on.
4. The router will recognize the modem. It will show up in the "lte" section in the Interfaces view in Winbox.
5. Configure a DHCP client on the lte interface. The router will be assigned an ip in the 192.168.32.x subnet with 192.168.32.2 as its gateway.
6. IPv4 traffic can now flow to Verizon. Note that unless you pay $500 for a "public" IP there is no way to get incoming traffic terminated directly. You will need to tunnel via PPTP or possibly IPSec/NAT-T to somewhere with unrestricted IP access to achieve inbound connectivity.
Note that there may be two NAT stages -- the modem reports its "public" IP address but that address is not the one you see when you make connections to the public 'net.
I did not see any of the reliability issues under load reported earlier in this thread. Possibly this is due to luck, or improved firmware, or use of the RB951 with better USB power supply design. I've seen a range of odd behavior with Raspberry Pi boards that turned out to be due to flaky USB power circuitry, very similar to the symptoms reported above.
Although the modem reports having an IPv6 address in its UI, I was not able to get any IPv6 functionality working with MT.
I was able to perform RouterOS bandwidth tests using TCP with another MT router in our data center, however I could not get a UDP bandwidth test to work, so possibly Verizon and/or the modem does not NAT UDP properly.
This page has some handy information on undocumented pages in the modem web UI:
http://www.proxicast.com/AbsoluteFM/afm ... ?faqid=272
Yes. Install the modem in a Windows machine, with the Verizon software. Use that setup to update the firmware and make sure it is configured in "LAN" mode (the 295 supports the older PPP mode but it needs to be in LAN mode to work with ROS). Also set it to "auto connect", and check that it successfully connects the PC to the Internet. If it works in a Windows 10 PC, it should be good to go for ROS because Windows 10 doesn't support the PPP operation mode either.
I just got my Pantech UML 295 and followed these directions and was not able to even see the LTE under interfaces but I can see it under resources under system > resources > USB
Any recommendations on what I can try?
Was able to get this working... All I needed to do was a hard reboot of the mikrotik before it actually shows up as an interface.Yes. Install the modem in a Windows machine, with the Verizon software. Use that setup to update the firmware and make sure it is configured in "LAN" mode (the 295 supports the older PPP mode but it needs to be in LAN mode to work with ROS). Also set it to "auto connect", and check that it successfully connects the PC to the Internet. If it works in a Windows 10 PC, it should be good to go for ROS because Windows 10 doesn't support the PPP operation mode either.
I just got my Pantech UML 295 and followed these directions and was not able to even see the LTE under interfaces but I can see it under resources under system > resources > USB
Any recommendations on what I can try?
Got this to work... Hard reboot was the fix and then the usb device shows up as an interface.Yes. Install the modem in a Windows machine, with the Verizon software. Use that setup to update the firmware and make sure it is configured in "LAN" mode (the 295 supports the older PPP mode but it needs to be in LAN mode to work with ROS). Also set it to "auto connect", and check that it successfully connects the PC to the Internet. If it works in a Windows 10 PC, it should be good to go for ROS because Windows 10 doesn't support the PPP operation mode either.
I just got my Pantech UML 295 and followed these directions and was not able to even see the LTE under interfaces but I can see it under resources under system > resources > USB
Any recommendations on what I can try?
I may be able to shed some light on this because I found the exact same thing with my UML295 : everything works until you try to pass traffic, then it disconnects from the Verizon network (and re-connects, rinse/repeat).ActiveCentury, I'd like to pick your brain on the UML295 please. I have two of them. I can get them to connect and they stay connected as long as I'm not trying to pass any data through the interface... As soon as I do, the modem drops and reconnects... I've tried MTU tweaks and all.. stuck at this point..
Do you get a public facing, routable IP with this or is it double NAT?Got this to work... Hard reboot was the fix and then the usb device shows up as an interface.Yes. Install the modem in a Windows machine, with the Verizon software. Use that setup to update the firmware and make sure it is configured in "LAN" mode (the 295 supports the older PPP mode but it needs to be in LAN mode to work with ROS). Also set it to "auto connect", and check that it successfully connects the PC to the Internet. If it works in a Windows 10 PC, it should be good to go for ROS because Windows 10 doesn't support the PPP operation mode either.
I just got my Pantech UML 295 and followed these directions and was not able to even see the LTE under interfaces but I can see it under resources under system > resources > USB
Any recommendations on what I can try?
With the technique I'm using (tunnel all traffic to a router on the Internet), I get a public routable IP obviously.
Do you get a public facing, routable IP with this or is it double NAT?
Thanks for your post.Curiously, although officially supported in 6.37 my experience has been that the Pantech UML295 does not work at all (and is not recognized by ROS as an LTE device) after 6.35.4.
Thank you Kristaps. This is great news!Please try latest 6.38rc14+ PANTECH modem issue should be fixed
Bummer!
Just downloaded and installed 6.38rc14 and unfortunately my particular Pantech UML295 still doesn't show up as an LTE interface.
John
Done!Can you please send supout.rif to support@mikrtik.com from latest version and verwin where lte interface is presented ?
Chris,I've also tried the 6.38rc14 and had the same experience. I ended up downgrading to 6.35.4 and all is well. I have a UML295 with a static ip and haven't figured out how to access the mAP2nD from the outside. This is to be a remote installation where access to the internal network in necessary. Any ideas out there other than setting up a tunnel? I sure appreciate this forum, it's been a life saver on many occasions.
Chris,I've also tried the 6.38rc14 and had the same experience. I ended up downgrading to 6.35.4 and all is well. I have a UML295 with a static ip and haven't figured out how to access the mAP2nD from the outside. This is to be a remote installation where access to the internal network in necessary. Any ideas out there other than setting up a tunnel? I sure appreciate this forum, it's been a life saver on many occasions.
See this article:
http://www.proxicast.com/AbsoluteFM/afm ... ?faqid=272
Best regards,
John