Another Recommendation for Switch (Home Use)?
m1chael
Member Posts: 58 ■■□□□□□□□□
in CCNA & CCENT
Yes I know another post asking for a recommendation for a switch for home use...lol
This is actually not so much for training as it would be used for my POE devices (IP cams / and the possibility of adding phones one day)
Anyway, I was thinking along the lines of a 24 port for future expansion....I already have 8 cams so never know when I will add more. Not quite sure if I should go ahead and consider a L3 switch or not?
Was looking on ebay at some 2960's and 3560's.....
Any recommendations / feedback would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Michael
This is actually not so much for training as it would be used for my POE devices (IP cams / and the possibility of adding phones one day)
Anyway, I was thinking along the lines of a 24 port for future expansion....I already have 8 cams so never know when I will add more. Not quite sure if I should go ahead and consider a L3 switch or not?
Was looking on ebay at some 2960's and 3560's.....
Any recommendations / feedback would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Michael
Comments
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EV42TMAN Member Posts: 256I got a 2950 running my house right now. My question is are you going to need L3 functionality for your set up? Because if you don't know L3 there is no reason to spend the money on 3560.Current Certification Exam: ???
Future Certifications: CCNP Route Switch, CCNA Datacenter, random vendor training. -
m1chael Member Posts: 58 ■■□□□□□□□□I got a 2950 running my house right now. My question is are you going to need L3 functionality for your set up? Because if you don't know L3 there is no reason to spend the money on 3560.
EV42TMAN-
Thanks for your response...I appreciate it! To answer your question, yes I have "foundational" knowledge of routing which a L3 switch would encompass. I was just thinking about a L3 device just in case I decided to use as a router to replace my existing cheapo basic netgear solution.
Is that a good idea in your opinion or would you just continue to use a run of the mill basic homeowner type router for home use and just buy a strictly POE L2 device?
Thoughts / Suggestions....
Thanks,
Michael -
Hondabuff Member Posts: 667 ■■■□□□□□□□Just remember you cant do NAT/PAT on a 3550/3560/3750 switch. Also the 3550 do not support the current 802.3af POE devices. I was bummed to find out that my 3550 wouldnt power my IP cam and Cisco WAP-4410.“The problem with quotes on the Internet is that you can’t always be sure of their authenticity.” ~Abraham Lincoln
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m1chael Member Posts: 58 ■■□□□□□□□□Just remember you cant do NAT/PAT on a 3550/3560/3750 switch. Also the 3550 do not support the current 802.3af POE devices. I was bummed to find out that my 3550 wouldnt power my IP cam and Cisco WAP-4410.
Thanks for the heads up....I need it to support 802.3af due to having multiple ip cams....so this is a must! -
RouteMyPacket Member Posts: 1,1042960POE will support the 802.3af devicesModularity and Design Simplicity:
Think of the 2:00 a.m. test—if you were awakened in the
middle of the night because of a network problem and had to figure out the
traffic flows in your network while you were half asleep, could you do it? -
m1chael Member Posts: 58 ■■□□□□□□□□RouteMyPacket wrote: »2960POE will support the 802.3af devices
Thanks for clarifying that the 2960 does POE...appreciate it...I will add that to my search list.