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Not enough information to give real good advice.
I have a similar situation with my setup. I have a wired router that also acts as my PPPoE connection through a bridged DSL modem. Secondly, I have a wireless router with no WAN connection. So essentially is configured to be a Wireless Access Point. After several days, I have difficulty establishing connectivity to my wireless network. Signal is very strong, but connectivity is flaky. XP, Vista and Linux all have connection issues, requiring several connection attempts before I have connectivity to the Internet. I believe this is a firmware problem in the DLink DI-524 that has not been corrected. The router does not have AP mode built-in, so I have effectively turned it into a Wireless bridge with a WAN connection set up as a loopback interface. My connectivity issues have gotten worse since I have Vista clients on the network...this could potentially be caused by IPv6 being enabled by default on all Vista workstations (haven't had enough time to work through that problem yet, plus this was also a problem prior to Vista).
When I reboot the wireless router, connectivity is very fast.
If you do choose to go the DSL route, use a DSL/POTS splitter rather than the individual filters on each of your phones (IF YOU CAN). The difference in DSL up/down speeds in noticeably different when you have a good clean signal. A splitter should be connected as close as possible to the DMARK... I was able to fit mine inside the Service side of my DMARK and run two lines inside the house. Use a good quality cable, such as CAT-5e or better for the DSL-side to modem line-In... the idea is to have the least amount of attenuated signal back to the central offices DSLAM, and to have the least amount of noise injected into the cable by things such as florescent lights, microwaves, etc...
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