Our club station has a HamWAN client connection, and we have several servers and devices to which I would like to assign 44-net addresses. These addresses would need to be routable from the internet and 44-net. Any networked devices that don't need to be reachable through the internet or 44-net would of course have private nat'ed addresses. As has been ably expressed on this list, HamWAN supports far more than just web traffic. :) A /29 block with 6 usable addresses would probably be too small. A /28 subnet with 14 usable IP addresses would be a good fit. Anything bigger would be a waste of 44-net ip space. From reading the HamWAN docs and the wiki.ampr.org web site, any net blocks smaller than /24 should be obtained from a regional coordinator that has one or more multi-user /24 blocks set aside for allocating smaller ip blocks. Assuming a /28 ip block on 44-net is allocated: I expect I would need to configure OSPF on the HamWAN modem to advertise routes to the /28 ip block over the wlan1 interface. Presumably an OSPF password would be needed. And of course static IPs from the /28 block would need to be assigned to the servers in question. First: Am I on the right track? Second: Is HamWAN such a "regional coordinator" (as mentioned on http://wiki.ampr.org/) that can allocate a /28 block for this purpose? Thanks very much - John kx7jm