Thank you. The referenced instructions do not work for me--for example, I am unable to access my Xfinity cable box IP address. I called Comcast tech support and was told that my cable box--which provides VOIP and smart television (including Netflix, Amazon Prime, You Tube, etc.) as well as wired and WiFi Internet--does not allow user access for things such as port forwarding. Since this is a weekend, I believe I got a lowest level tech support person who may not know the correct answer, so I will call again Monday during normal business hours to see if I get a different answer.
I think I'm understanding that your network is like this:
Coax Cable > Comcast supplied box > Your own router (wifi, etc)
Is that correct? What gives you your IP? Your router or the box from Comcast?
If it's your router, you likely need to plug directly into the Comcast box to access the IP noted in the online guides. You said it only provides wifi, but it has to at least have one ethernet connection, because I think that's what you said your router is plugged into?
With my AT&T service that's what I have (Fiber > AT&T box (that's capable of providing VOIP) > my Router). I had to access the AT&T box to turn enable a DMZ done. The IP that I needed to access was 192.168.0.1, but once I was assigned an IP from my own router, it wouldn't resolve that address. So I needed to get an IP from the AT&T box, by plugging directly into it, and then accessing the IP. Once in there I could enable DMZ (or whatever they called it). At that point, you tell the provided box to send all commands to a certain IP, mac address or ethernet port (your router). Then your router is able to take over the actual routing capabilities that you want.