[HamWAN PSDR] Component Engineering: Ethernet Switch - 8 port

Steve stevewa206 at gmail.com
Thu Feb 28 08:55:45 PST 2013


If you are using Microtik routers... why would you not use their multiport
router/switches? Keep it all in the same famility. Their cost is not that
much even if you just used it as a switch compaired to Cisco. And you never
know when the router part might be handy.

The main reason is you might run into some compatibility issues down the
road. Also, that means you have to learn and keep in your head mutiliple
CLI's and OS's. What a pain.

Just my 2 cents from working in a mixed router / switch enviroment. It
sucks....  :-)  Yes, your tied to one vendor, but your sorta doing that
already by selecting Microtik as your main wireless radio.

Or am I missing something here??

Steve N0FPF



On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 3:50 AM, Benjamin Krueger <ben.krueger at gmail.com>wrote:

> They look good. I'll take a more detailed review tomorrow. Do remember
> that if we centralize routing, we're also centralizing failure. One bad
> switch can now take down an entire site.
>
>
>  On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 3:15 AM, Bart Kus <me at bartk.us> wrote:
>
>>  Dear Ben-Jammin',
>>
>> So you might recall our recent discussion where you weighed in favor of
>> putting "real" switches into the cell sites to tie the radios together.  My
>> major pushback to you was the price of a typical Cisco/etc switch.
>>
>> Well, I've updated the "Ethernet Switch - 8 port<https://www.hamwan.org/t/tiki-index.php?page=Ethernet+Switch+-+8+port&structure=HamWAN>"
>> page with 3 new alternatives!  They're a miniscule amount of money more
>> than the D-Link smart switch, and are in fact full blown RouterOS routers.
>> They also feature 2 more ports (10 total) than the 8-port requirement, but
>> the catch is only 5 of the ports are GigE.  This might be OK since all the
>> 5SHPn radios are 100Mbit only.  The GigE requirement was for
>> future-proofing only.
>>
>> The other super nice thing is they can do MPLS-TE and preserve QoS.  This
>> might simplify the network structure a lot by moving routing off of the
>> modems and into these routers.  Instead of 7 linked routers at a busy cell
>> site, we'd have 1.  The routing tables get a lot easier.  These routers
>> also have more routing horsepower than what's in the modems.  Especially
>> the $105 model, which features a faster CPU and twice the RAM.
>>
>> 2 of the 3 are also rack-mountable, which might be a good thing in most
>> sites.
>>
>> Finally, the idea of using a single OS for all networking is appealing.
>> No need for fragmented administrator education, and all the gear is
>> designed to work together.
>>
>> Let me know what you think.  I'm kinda psyched about this approach.  I
>> ordered a RB2011UAS-2HnD-IN for my personal home use to replace my
>> AP+router here.  We'll see how it works out here.
>>
>> --Bart
>>
>> RB2011UAS2HnDIN
>>
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>>
>
>
> --
> Benjamin
>
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>
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