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Education > Certification Cisco > Re: Buying New ...
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Re: Buying New Lab Kit for CCNA

by "Scott Perry" <scott.perry@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Jun 25, 2008 at 10:23 AM

Your company is going to buy a lab of equipment for you to use???  Did you 
ask them or did they initiate the offer to you?  Wow, must be nice because

it is definately rare.  The best I have ever seen was at a very large and 
wealthy cor****ation which provided one of each model device in a shared 
department lab.  It was not intended for exam study but was really for 
testing configurations and IOS images.  I used it to gain familiarity with

various router and switch models which the Cisco exam track did not 
concentrate on.

2600 series routers, specifically 2600 XM models are pretty good and can 
perform ethernet trunking.  You need more than one router but may not need

more than three.  With three, you can advertise a TCP/IP subnet on one 
router, have the next router learn it via a dynamic routing protocol, then

pass it on to the third.  The same is possible with only two, but with
three 
you can continue into the CCNP and practice routing protocol
redistribution 
and mixing routing protocols.
2500 series routers are old and obsolete.  You will find them referenced
in 
older books.  Their ethernet interface uses an AUI connection and must use
a 
transciever to operate at its mere 10mb/s in our current twisted-pair
world.
How about using 3 of the Cisco 2611XM routers?

2900 series switches come in a variety of models.  The number of ****ts
does 
not matter because no more than three routers were recommended above.  Get

at least two switches so that you can try out etherchannels, spanning-tree

loops by making more than one connection between switches, and the sharing

of VLAN information via VTP.  A great model would be the Catalyst 2940 8 
****t switch.  It only lacks a feature called MDIX which, when enabled, 
detects crossover or straight-through cable connections.  It is a layer 2 
switch but you would not need layer 3 switching (router within a switch) 
until the CCNP exam BCMSN.
1900 series switches are not only old and obsolete, but they did not even 
have a full CLI (command line interface) IOS.  Many feautres are either 
missing or use different commands.
How about using 2 of the Cisco Catalyst 2900XL, 2950, or 2940 switches?

Make sure that you will have a few of each twisted-pair cable, both 
straight-through and crossover.  You will also need at least one Cisco 
console cable.  Perhaps one of the devices will come with one.

Although you may be excited by the idea of running bigger equipment if 
available, like the 4500/5500/6500 series switches, pass them up.  They
are 
more complex and might confuse someone at this time who is still learning.

3500 series switches, however, are acceptable but more expensive.  Some of

them are layer 3 capable but this can be ignored by not using those 
commands.  Also, a layer 3 capable 3500 series switch is enough for
learning 
CCNP switching concepts in the BCMSN exam.

-----
Scott Perry
Indianapolis, IN
-----

"K" <@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message 
news:ZZqdnSkK1ILl_vzVnZ2dnUVZ8hmdnZ2d@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> If I was going to get my company to purchase brand new Cisco kit to set
up 
> a lab for me to prectice CCNA what would I be best buying?
>
> And are multiple switches and routers necessary?  And if so are
different 
> models recommended?
>
 




 2 Posts in Topic:
Buying New Lab Kit for CCNA
"K" <@[EMAIL  2008-06-24 22:13:26 
Re: Buying New Lab Kit for CCNA
"Scott Perry" &  2008-06-25 10:23:47 

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tan12V112 Wed Dec 3 1:03:48 CST 2008.