12-08-2025 06:20 AM
I have EE full fibre broadband and IPv6 is enabled using the EE Smart Hub Plus router. When I perform IP address checks it reports both IPv4 and public IPv6 address, (not a ULA or link-local address).
I wish to remotely connect to a server on my local network using the servers IPv6 address. I can successfully connect to the server remotely using it's IPv4 address using port forwarding on the router. But after opening a port in the IPv6 Pinholes menu does not allow me to connect remotely, the port is closed. I can connect to the server via its IPv6 address from my local network, but not from outside of my home.
When contacting EE support over the phone, I was told they would not help me, they can only help when the connection is not working
Has anyone managed to access an internal device from the internet using IPV6 pinholes?
Solved! See the answer below or view the solution in context.
18-08-2025 04:21 PM
UPDATE 2: SOLVED! 🎉🍾
I had another frustrated experience trying to contact EE support but as soon as I started explaining the problem , I noticed the call center operator started becoming clueless when I mentioned IPv6 and firewall and after I explained how the internet worked, he put me on hold to speak to the "team lead", just to come back and say "we don't support whatever you are talking about", even if I mentioned the router is from EE and the network is from EE too
I then acquired a new router, the excellent Flint 2 (GL-MT6000) and it worked almost out of the box, which prompted me to throw the EE router in the recycle bin.
Conclusion: The EE routers are extremely low quality devices, ditto for the "technical" skill of the support operators
18-08-2025 04:42 PM
@EE5HT At least you are up and going now, recycle bin not a good place when EE come to get it later and charge you for not being able to return there property!
18-08-2025 05:11 PM
Indeed, I soon realised they would charge for it and recovered the device 😀
18-08-2025 05:11 PM
@JimM11 is right, I hope it's the metaphorical recycle bin and not the real one, else you risk falling foul of this at some point in the future 😕
The Flint devices are nice. I've a Beryl AX for travel, and the Flint 3 for tinkering. That said, the EE Pro does trump the Flint 3 for me when it comes to raw Wi-Fi performance/speeds.
18-08-2025 05:27 PM
@bobpullen What test did you do to compare the performance between both routers?
19-08-2025 09:50 AM
@EE5HT - nothing overly scientific, mainly anecdotal observations from occasionally checking the PHY rate/running speedtests at various locations around my house. Most of that was done using my Wi-Fi 7 devices from memory. I suspect much of the difference might be down to the fewer antenna on the Flint 3 (I think your Flint 2 has more, it's just missing the WiFi 7/6GHz).
19-08-2025 10:14 AM
UPDATE 3:
Got official confirmation from an EE employee, that their routers have a bug in the IPv6 pinhole implementation, and that this would be followed up with the product manager responsible for the firmware.
19-08-2025 10:15 AM
Got it, I haven't noticed any performance difference between Flint 2 and Home Hub Plus.