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Supermiguel wrote: I want to spend about $300 dollars... To get a really good router for my house. Since im studing for the CCNA i want to get a router to study and to use it in my house.. Right now i have 2 2501 2 2503 1 2521 and 2 1912 in a litle lab in my house im using it to study for the CCNA but on of the topics is SDM which my old routers dont support it. My question is should i go ahead and get a 2620XM full memory upgraded or should i buy one of the new 850 routers????
Supermiguel wrote: i can buy a 2620xm for about $150 with WIC-2AM 128MB DRAM 32MB is the 1760 better??? i can buy the 851 for about 250 brand new...
Supermiguel wrote: which wic do i need?
Supermiguel wrote: i have a cable router.. So i need to buy a wic-1enet ??? i got the 2620xm so which wic i need
Supermiguel wrote: thanks but all the wic-1enet i see are just for the 1700 are they the same??? or does the 2620xm uses a different one btw: Que bola acere
Supermiguel wrote: hehe se soy de camaguey y vivo en florida en usa tu??
Supermiguel wrote: that NM-1E is 10baseT right??? just 10Mb/s is there a way to get 100?
dynamik wrote: Is that's what's "officially" supported? I have a 1FE-TX in my 2613, which is 100mb/sec.
elegua wrote: cisco said that the 2600 series do not run 12.4 IOS and they do, go figure
Supermiguel wrote: so with the 2621XM i wont have any problem at all??? Cable Modem to FE0/0 FE0/1 to 2950 switch right??? thanks all of you guys for the help
ibarrere wrote: The fastest they can push traffic is 30Kpps. At 64 bytes per packet, that results in 15.36Mbps. The pps count will remain the same, you will achieve different throughput in Mbps depending on the size of the packets traversing the router. With a consistent stream of 250 byte packets, that rounds out to 60Mbps. But also, as tomstorey said, once you start using features aside from raw routing, the performance will diminish substantially.
Supermiguel wrote: I saw in another forums that this 2621XM wont support my speed needs (20mbs) ibarrere wrote: The fastest they can push traffic is 30Kpps. At 64 bytes per packet, that results in 15.36Mbps. The pps count will remain the same, you will achieve different throughput in Mbps depending on the size of the packets traversing the router. With a consistent stream of 250 byte packets, that rounds out to 60Mbps. But also, as tomstorey said, once you start using features aside from raw routing, the performance will diminish substantially. is there a way to make this router be able to hit my speed needs?
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