Thanks MrSaffron, I understand your logic, I think

.
At least I can see why the subnet mask of 155.155.155.0 would put the modems IP inside the LAN and so traffic for it wouldn't be routed to the wan port.
As for changing things. I have static IP's setup in the LAN for various servers (multimedia, print etc.) Plus it is working fine at the moment. So I would rather leave the LAN alone and change the modem setup to work with it.
So, I need the modems IP to be outside the subnet to that any traffic for it will be sent to the wan port of the router.
If I just change the subnet mask on my router to match the range 192.168.0..199.
That will put 192.168.0.200 outside and therefore in the wan will it not? Or am I missing the plot completely?
If I'm on the right path is 255.255.255.199 the right subnet mask for this?
My only concern is that that looks very much like my setup at the moment with my LAN/Router being on 192.168.0.1, subnet 255.255.255.0 and my modem being on 192.168.1.1 completely outside the subnet.
But I can't access it from within the LAN. That makes me think I've missed something fundamental??
On another tack, following on from your faffing around statement in paragraph 3 of your post.. If there is another way to skin this rabbit I'm all ears