No, you don't need a router. A node is determined to be a member of a VLAN by their 
MAC address. Layer 2 rather than Layer 3 remember? The router is only needed to deal 
with packets destined for anything outside the VLAN. The IP addresses don't matter.

Karen E Young

*********** REPLY SEPARATOR  ***********

On 7/20/2000 at 2:53 PM jeongwoo park wrote:

:HI all
:I have a question.
:Cisco recommends that there be one-to-one relationship
:between ip subnets and Vlans.
:When the number of devices on a Vlan exceeds the
:number of host ip addresses per configured subnet,
:more than one subnet can exit on a Vlan.
:Having said that, my question;
:There are two subnets in a Vlan. Do we need a router
:to interconnect these two subnets?
:I know that we need a router to interconnect two
:different Vlans.
:
:Thanks.
:
:jeongwoo
:
:
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