The whole 4000 (and M) series?
We have a few hundred 4700M routers, and previously 4000 routers (might
have been 4000M, I forget). Haven't had too many problems with them that
I'm aware of. Of course, they're EoS now, which is a slight problem...
JMcL
----- Forwarded by Jenny Mcleod/NSO/CSDA on 03/05/2002 01:25 pm -----
"CiscoB"
Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
03/05/2002 06:04 am
Please respond to "CiscoB"
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
cc:
Subject: Re: Building a Cisco Lab [7:43072]
Is this part of a business decision process?:
Wayne,
Ive had nothing but problems with 4000 series modular routers. So many
problems, in fact, that I've stopped selling them. Too many hardware
failures. Stick with the 2500 series
thanks,
-Brad Ellis
CCIE#5796 (R&S / Security)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cisco home labs: www.optsys.net
""Wayne Jang"" wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> I see, the token ring version is in less demand and you won't be using
the
> ethernet/token ring anyway.
>
> But what about those AGS+ routers. I saw one on ebay for $100. It had
8
> serial ports. What's the drawback to using that for a frame switch?
>
>
>
> ""Wayne Jang"" wrote in message
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> > I'm thinking about buying a 2520 as a frame router.
> >
> > I already have two 2501s, one 2502, one 1201 swtich, and a 1912
switch.
> >
> > Is getting the 2520 a good way to spend my very limited funds?
> >
> > Wayne
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