Oh ya. It only support old SW cluster. So MC-LAG is no question. Thanks for the heads up.
-N On Fri, Oct 4, 2019 at 3:30 PM Brad Peczka <[email protected]> wrote: > The Cisco IE series is solid gear. > > > > I’ve deployed it in various flavours, in outdoor cabinets and boxes > throughout the North-West of WA, and observed failure rates are negligible > – not a bad effort given the ambient can be up to 48 degrees, with > temperatures in some cabinets being up to another 20-25 degrees on top of > that. > > > > Enclosure selection is key to equipment survivability and I’ll throw a > vote in here for those made by B&R (Pilbara SP, Lambert LB, Field FC), > especially when kitted out with sunshades. > > > > Note that IE switches won’t do MC-LAG/VPC (happy to be corrected though), > but should tick the rest of your boxes. > > > > Regards, > > -Brad. > > > > *From:* AusNOG <[email protected]> *On Behalf Of *Roman > Islam > *Sent:* Friday, 4 October 2019 1:15 PM > *To:* [email protected] > *Subject:* [AusNOG] Cisco IE4000 Industrial Ethernet L3 Switch > > > > Planing to to use Cisco IE4000 series industrial ethernet switches for a > large client in QLD. Wondering any one on the list would like to share > first hand experience to use these switches in a rugged environment. > Requirements are simple and stable running state of L3 features like > OSPFv3, multi-chassis etherchannel and IOS based ACL. > > > > Aware that these features very simple on standard DC grade IOS devices. > What about on the ruggedized ethernet switches? Will be DIN mounted on > remote site data cabinet, DC power and varying ambient temperature of -10 > to 45 degree C. > > > > -Roman > > Optus Engineer > > >
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