Fascinating.  I’ve never had an ASR-1001 come with two sets of ears, and I also 
note that the text of the instruction manual doesn’t reference the rear set at 
all.  I’ve never seen rear ears on any Cisco gear of my own, nor on anything 
the local ILEC has installed either.  I think the diagram is in error here.
However, the “optional” step 1 is a pretty solid hint (i.e. pretty much a 
clue-by-four upside the head, here!) that you really should use a shelf.  As in 
you REALLY SHOULD USE A SHELF of some kind.

It doesn’t even have to be a full shelf – any rail kit that relies on an 
“L”-shaped profile instead of interlocking sliding bits should support an 
ASR-1001 just fine,  e.g. Tripp-Lite’s 4POSTRAILKIT1U.  RackSolutions’ 
Universal Fixed Server Rack 
Rails<https://www.rack-solutions.ca/rack-rails.html> shows an example of a 
slightly different design that some prefer – it all works about the same way.

The other thing I’ve done is used a shallow cantilever shelf to support the 
rear end of equipment that only comes with ears, if it’s deep enough – 
something like StarTech’s CABSHELFV1U; the trick is finding a shelf that 
simultaneously doesn’t have the structural fold at the rear in the way AND 
doesn’t interfere with the device immediately below.  You’d think there’re only 
2 geometries of product to worry about, but there are actually more b/c there’s 
no standard – so test-fit first, or examine photos really carefully.  This is 
usually more of a hack than a permanent, supportable solution, but sometimes it 
can work very well and very cheaply.

Or, just make sure you’re installing the ASR immediately above something that 
does have proper 4-post mounting rails.  This is probably the single most 
common way to safely & securely mount “eared” devices in a 4-post rack that 
I’ve seen – that Dell PowerEdge server in the rack suddenly starts doing 
double-duty as a shelf!  (Or the UPS, or the KVM, or the ethernet switch, or…)

-Adam

Adam Thompson
Consultant, Infrastructure Services
[cid:[email protected]]
100 - 135 Innovation Drive
Winnipeg, MB R3T 6A8
(204) 977-6824 or 1-800-430-6404 (MB only)
https://www.merlin.mb.ca<https://www.merlin.mb.ca/>
[cid:[email protected]]Chat with me on 
Teams<https://teams.microsoft.com/l/chat/0/[email protected]>


From: NANOG <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Chuck 
Church
Sent: Thursday, April 27, 2023 10:36 AM
To: 'Mark Stevens' <[email protected]>; [email protected]
Subject: RE: Standard DC rack rail distance, front to back question

Hey all, sorry I did mean to say ASR1001 (an X model to be exact).  The 4 post 
mounting they show in a hardware mounting doc uses front and back ears, which 
I’ve never done:
https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/routers/asr1000/install/guide/asr1routers/asr-1000-series-hig/asr-hig-1001.html#task_1205646
see figure 16 slightly down from there.

I do see some generic rails from TrippLite that probably would work, as well as 
shelves.   I was hoping a standard depth that most vendors honored for 4 post 
existed, but it doesn’t seem likely.  We’ll have a variety of PaloAlto, Cisco, 
Checkpoint, and others co-habiting.

Chuck

From: NANOG 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 On Behalf Of Mark Stevens
Sent: Thursday, April 27, 2023 11:17 AM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Standard DC rack rail distance, front to back question

Lucky you with a 19" data rack. All I have are 23" telco racks but I will say, 
the 23" extension ears from Cisco are serious and my router chassis' don't sag.

Mark

On 4/27/2023 10:04 AM, Chris Marget wrote:

On Thu, Apr 27, 2023 at 9:53 AM Chuck Church 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
for a Cisco ASA1001, there aren’t rails, but rather front and back ‘ears’ you 
use to hit both front and back posts.

Front *and* back ears? I'm not sure what an ASA 1001 is (ASR?) but my 
experience with these boxes is that they have a single pair of ears which can 
be mounted front OR back.

The heavier / deeper 1RU devices do tend to sag alarmingly.

 Is there a ‘standard’ distance between front and back rails that devices 
usually adhere to?

If you're thinking of setting the front/back distance to accommodate a specific 
device, table 2 might be of some interest:
https://i.dell.com/sites/doccontent/business/solutions/engineering-docs/en/Documents/rail-rack-matrix.pdf


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