Is hardware essential to pass CCENT?
CDRichards
Member Posts: 84 ■■□□□□□□□□
in CCNA & CCENT
Hi,
studying for my CCENT and really enjoying it so far. I was wondering if you need to practice on hardware to pass it or do the simulators do just as good a job at accustoming you to the IOS? Also, if I did buy a switch, would it make sense to add it to my home network or just keep it as an isolated lab unit?
Thank you
studying for my CCENT and really enjoying it so far. I was wondering if you need to practice on hardware to pass it or do the simulators do just as good a job at accustoming you to the IOS? Also, if I did buy a switch, would it make sense to add it to my home network or just keep it as an isolated lab unit?
Thank you
2013 - MTA Networking Fundamentals [x] MTA Security Fundamentals [x] MTA Operating System Fundamentals [x] CompTIA Network+ [x] CCENT [in progress] CCNA [ ]
Comments
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krjay Member Posts: 290simulator or GNS3 are fine for CCENT.2014 Certification Goals: 70-410 [ ] CCNA:S [ ] Linux+ [ ]
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CDRichards Member Posts: 84 ■■□□□□□□□□Thank you krjay, about a 1/3 of the way through the book and was just wondering, maybe later on in my studies I'll invest in some lab kit but keep it simple for the CCENT2013 - MTA Networking Fundamentals [x] MTA Security Fundamentals [x] MTA Operating System Fundamentals [x] CompTIA Network+ [x] CCENT [in progress] CCNA [ ]
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bbarrick Member Posts: 242 ■■■□□□□□□□I agree I think I could pass it with a sim alone. However, I'd start planning for a lab now. Look at the hardware that's available, learn what's what and when you get close to test time maybe even start piecing a CCNA lab together. I jumped into mine, I'm not disappointed with what I bought but I definitely could have spent a little more time learning more about what I was buying.
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NetworkVeteran Member Posts: 2,338 ■■■■■■■■□□How much gear do you need to buy? Zip, zero, zilch. The same goes for CCNA, CCNP, and CCIE.CDRichards wrote: »I was wondering if you need to practice on hardware to pass it or do the simulators do just as good a job at accustoming you to the IOS?
Buying real hardware at first seems ideal, until you realize it costs more, you typically have to learn about obsolete hardware to make intelligent purchasing decisions, you will face delaying in procuring it, you have to deal with break-downs, you may find it has missing/insufficient parts for your needs, and you have to spend time cabling/recabling to create different topologies. However, perhaps holding real gear in your hands acts as a motivator for you. And at least some of the above (like cabling/recabling) would be useful and enlightening for someone just starting out.
If you want more free-play than simulators allow, also consider rack rentals. -
CDRichards Member Posts: 84 ■■□□□□□□□□@bbarick - thank you for your comment. I think if I do decide to buy hardware I had better really look into it, so many models out there to look over!
@ NetworkVeteran - thank you for your comment. Is there an emulator/ simulator you could recommend? From what I have read so far I only need to understand a small amount of the basic commands but there's a big difference to reading and actually typing it for real.2013 - MTA Networking Fundamentals [x] MTA Security Fundamentals [x] MTA Operating System Fundamentals [x] CompTIA Network+ [x] CCENT [in progress] CCNA [ ] -
NetworkVeteran Member Posts: 2,338 ■■■■■■■■□□The typical recommendations for simulators are Boson NetSim ($100-$150) and Packet Tracer (for Network Academy students only, free), and for router emulators GNS3 (requires an IOS image, more setup time than other options).
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dazl1212 Member Posts: 377I got by on simulators for the CCENT and will likely use them for the CCNA.Goals for 2013 Network+ [x] ICND1 [x] ICND2 [ ]
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blueberries Banned Posts: 138Use the stimulator, and save a buck or two. Its basically as good as the real thing.
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DoubleNNs Member Posts: 2,015 ■■■■■□□□□□I heard that there are ways to do switching via GNS3.
Of course, I'm still on the CCENT level and have packet tracer, so I haven't actually looked into it.
But to answer the OP's question, def not. I used GNS3 and Packet Tracer, which was BEYOND sufficient enough for the exam.Goals for 2018:
Certs: RHCSA, LFCS: Ubuntu, CNCF CKA, CNCF CKAD | AWS Certified DevOps Engineer, AWS Solutions Architect Pro, AWS Certified Security Specialist, GCP Professional Cloud Architect
Learn: Terraform, Kubernetes, Prometheus & Golang | Improve: Docker, Python Programming
To-do | In Progress | Completed -
bbarrick Member Posts: 242 ■■■□□□□□□□The downside to sims, imo, is the lack of hands on. Getting familiar with the cables, the ports, etc...
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Dhonzik Member Posts: 4 ■□□□□□□□□□I think hardware is the way to go even if you start off small. Just make sure the routers you purchase support at least 12.4 and better yet 15.1 since the new CCNA test is leaning more toward that. Anyone just starting out on the quest to obtain your CCNA like myself should only consider taking the new test even if its harder like I have read. I agree that simulators can be used at first, but you don't really feel the passion unless you are actually moving cables and configuring on a real piece of equipment. That my 2 cents worth.
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Danielm7 Member Posts: 2,310 ■■■■■■■■□□I took a CCNA course at a local school 10+ years ago, used all the equipment, etc, then haven't touched Cisco equipment since then. I just passed the CCENT today (for WGU) and didn't have access to any equipment. I thought it would make it a lot more difficult but using simulators and labs feels like the same thing so it worked well enough for me.
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CDRichards Member Posts: 84 ■■□□□□□□□□Thank you ALL for your comments. Seems like there is no 'right' way to do it. Think I will go with the simulators for now and then see how I feel. However, today my studying is not going well, head in the shed. Can see a LOT of study break going to happen.
Again, thank you all for your comments, all are appreciated and valued2013 - MTA Networking Fundamentals [x] MTA Security Fundamentals [x] MTA Operating System Fundamentals [x] CompTIA Network+ [x] CCENT [in progress] CCNA [ ]