It really comes down to how many hosts you have and the amount of inter-VLAN
traffic you expect. There are also many options to use in increasing
performance, such as:

etherchannel with ISL trunking
multi-layer switching (if the switch and router support it)
sending various VLANs to different routers

It all depends on what you want to do, how your network is set up, what kind
of equipment you have, and how much money you're willing to spend.

Tony Olzak, CCNP, MCSE

"Curly G. Craddlerock" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
8l4ile$4eu$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:8l4ile$4eu$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> How many VLAN/sub-int can I effectivly put on an interface. I would like
to
> buy a dedicated router and run my VLAN's off of it. Any suggestions on the
> router or my thinking? Does the DCN class cover these design issues? I'm a
> CCNA, but I have a lot of design ?'s.  Thanks for your help.
>
>
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