450's may choke under load. I've had luck with 1100's and 750's On Oct 16, 2012, at 4:18 PM, Ty Featherling <[email protected]> wrote:
> I have a client that has a remote office. We have service to their main > office and they would like service to their main office. What they want > though, is for the remote office to be connected to the main office's > network and get it's internet from there. I know I can set up a pair of > RB450s so that there is a tunnel between them but I don't know specifically > how I will do that. > > Should I just put the RB behind their router at the main office, on their > local LAN, and have it "dial" out to a public address on an RB setup as a > WAN router at the remote site? Do the endpoints of the tunnel have to be > able to see each other? What type of tunnel would be best? PPTP? VPN? EOIP? > > If you can't tell I am new to this concept of tunnels. I appreciate any > help. > > -Ty > -------------- next part -------------- > An HTML attachment was scrubbed... > URL: > <http://www.butchevans.com/pipermail/mikrotik/attachments/20121016/2e07c4d2/attachment.html> > _______________________________________________ > Mikrotik mailing list > [email protected] > http://www.butchevans.com/mailman/listinfo/mikrotik > > Visit http://blog.butchevans.com/ for tutorials related to Mikrotik RouterOS _______________________________________________ Mikrotik mailing list [email protected] http://www.butchevans.com/mailman/listinfo/mikrotik Visit http://blog.butchevans.com/ for tutorials related to Mikrotik RouterOS

