Help with 3 Site Network

Hello,
I need some advice or professional services to setup and configure a new installation. I have a beginner to intermediate level of experience with this technology but am comfortable with configuration.

Here is the scenario:

  • 3 sites
  • Site 1: main office with symmetric 500Mbps fiber and Peplink B One 5G (planned)
  • Site 2: home office with 100Mbps up / 500Mbps down cable and Peplink B One 5G (planned)
  • Site 3: mobile (maritime) with Starlink, cellular, and sometimes WiFi WAN with MAX Transit Duo Pro (to be upgraded MAX BR2 Pro? (TBD))
  • Objective: Site 3 (mobile) connects to Site 1 (office) via SpeedFusion/VPN such that all Internet traffic is via the Site 1 WAN. Site 3 also has the ability to access Site 2 (home) like it is on the same LAN for access to local devices. Site 2 does not need any direct connection to site 1 and vice versa.

I am looking for direction on optimal topology and also recommendations on hardware if the selected products are not the best ones.

Thank you.

Hi…

Just comments…

B-ONE <> BR2PRO <> TST-DUO-PRO

site1: NICE…
site2: NICE…
Site3: So… You have a Starlink and the tst-duo-pro is dual cat lte-12. I will keep it and not replace by MAX BR2 PRO.

Objective:
Site 3 <> SpeedFusion <> Site 1. Why send all the internet traffic to site 1?
Site 3 <> SpeedFusion <> Site 2. Site 2 have a fixed public ip address?

Regards, Barros.

Thank you for the reply, Barros!

The reason to send all traffic from Site 3 via Site 1 is because some country- specific services will not work when Site 3 is located outside of my home country. This will make it appear Site 3 is in my home country at all times.

Site 2 does not have a static WAN address. DDNS is possible, however.

My thoughts behind upgrading the TST-DUO-PRO is to gain 5G support and to increase the number of LAN ports.

okay…

So…
MAX-BR2-PRO-5GN-T-PRM (GLOBAL)
OR
MAX-BR2-PRO-5GK-T-PRM (North America*)

  • AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon (C-Band), FirstNet

Thanks!

Any advice on the topology?

no… I think it is simple, but works.