The run is about 4-5 feet, so I'm thinking copper should be fine.  The
connection is between an HP 4108gl chassis, which all our users are
plugged into, and a Cisco 3560 layer 3 switch, which is doing the
routing between the VLANs on the HP.  So all traffic outside the subnet
the servers are on, comes in the HP, goes over to the Cisco, then comes
back to the HP to hit the servers.  Then does the reverse to get back to
the workstations...
 
Joe Heaton
 

________________________________

From: Joseph L. Casale [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, February 29, 2008 3:34 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Gig ports - copper or fiber?



Given your comparing apples to apples in terms of config (duplex etc) I
would say plenty, and it depends on where/how you're routing said
distance of "medium".

Copper is susceptible to interference, light isn't (don't over analyze
that).

Fiber goes further than std CAT 6 for example.

Where you going, next to what, and how far?

jlc

 

From: Joe Heaton [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, February 29, 2008 4:30 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Gig ports - copper or fiber?

 

Is there any real difference, if I use a copper RJ-45 port, or a fiber
port, if both are set to 1000T?

 

Joe Heaton

AISA

Employment Training Panel

1100 J Street, 4th Floor

Sacramento, CA  95814

(916) 327-5276

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

 

 






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