If the allowed equipment , ie your PC/Laptop etc has fixed IP addresses then you could conceivably limit the DHCP range (nn.nn.n.100 - nn.nn.n.199) to , say , 10% of your bandwidth. Then set yours to 90%.
By fixed I mean either within DHCP or set by network adaptor.
Or you could do it by prioritization with yours being high & the others being low. This is perhaps the better option.
Note that you would lose a little of your total throughput by doing this.
caulkz wrote:Apologies if the following question is a little off topic:
Will the router see my PC if I give it a static IP outside the DHCP range?
Regards, Kieran.
Yes, it will.
It will be exactly the same as when a static IP has been assigned to a wireless printer outside the DHCP range, or even another pc running off the same router to prevent it from picking up the same IP as the main pc.