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Standard User joconnell
(experienced) Thu 21-Feb-13 09:03:40
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Re: Gigabit switch


[re: prlzx] [link to this post]
 
Thanks for all that very useful info

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Standard User The_Voyager
(committed) Fri 22-Feb-13 12:28:31
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Re: Gigabit switch


[re: joconnell] [link to this post]
 
I only bought one the other day, the SG1016D from Amazon, my first TP-Link one, I've always had Netgear before that, it comes with brackets for fixing in a rack and stick on feet for standing on a desk, I just plugged the line from the router into LAN 1 and then all my other stuff into the other ports, no problems at all - and it looks and feels much more sturdier than the Netgear ones I have had previously

Bob
BT Home Highway+CIX -> Nildram until Pipex -> SKY -> Be*Unlimited ->BT Infinity WRBRIX
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Standard User deleted
(deleted) Thu 07-Mar-13 20:26:20
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Re: Gigabit switch


[re: The_Voyager] [link to this post]
 
If you are after a reliable switch that is a bit of a bargain get a HP 1410-24G. Its gone up in price recently and is now around £130, but it sells in the US for about $230. Exactly why its so cheap in the UK god only knows, but its a damn good switch that has high switching capacity (48 Gbps) a Lifetime Warranty with Next business day replacement.

Its an absurd switch for the money that's even before you know its also a managed switch.

Have 2 of them operating at our place and they are truly faultless, zero issue equipment with 100% up time. Really you are almost stupid to buy any other switch given how cheap these are; I would really love to know actually why they are so cheap in the UK as its really odd. Note the 16 port version isn't so much a bargain and is only £10-20 cheaper, but is half the physical size.


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Standard User trolleybus
(member) Thu 07-Mar-13 20:45:21
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Re: Gigabit switch


[re: MHC] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by MHC:
Reason I say to put VOIP direct to the router is that is is effectively separate from the rest of your network and does not have any local traffic.

As for POE there are different adapters out there. If you use one which injects power onto te line, it should/could only present data and no power to the switch . Does the patch panel need to be? Not really, you are only using low voltage but just choose appropriately.

I am about to install a couple of VOIP base stations here, they can use POE but as there is real power close by there is no need.


Hmmm. let's say you have 5 snom360s in your network; you can't connect them all to the router and therefor a switch would be necessary.
Standard User MHC
(sensei) Thu 07-Mar-13 20:48:32
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Re: Gigabit switch


[re: trolleybus] [link to this post]
 
True, but is always a case of designing/building it in the most effective/efficient manner.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

M H C


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Standard User prlzx
(experienced) Thu 07-Mar-13 21:28:57
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Re: Gigabit switch


[re: deleted] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by dogcat:
... a HP 1410-24G... high switching capacity (48 Gbps) ... that's even before you know its also a managed switch

HP's website says this:
"HP 1410 series switches are unmanaged Gigabit Ethernet and Fast Ethernet switches"
Do you mean some other model?

48Gbps isn't really high switching capacity, because it is a shorthand for saying the backplane supports 1Gbps flowing into (a port) and out of (another port) at the same time for each and every port. So for a rackmount switch with 24 (full-duplex) ports, it is what you should expect.



prompt $P - Invalid drive specification - Abort, Retry, Fail? $G
prlzx on iDNET: ADSL2+ / 21CN at ~4Mbps / 700kbps with IP4/6

Edited by prlzx (Thu 07-Mar-13 21:45:40)

Standard User joconnell
(experienced) Fri 08-Mar-13 13:24:58
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Re: Gigabit switch


[re: deleted] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by dogcat:
If you are after a reliable switch that is a bit of a bargain get a HP 1410-24G. Its gone up in price recently and is now around £130, but it sells in the US for about $230. Exactly why its so cheap in the UK god only knows, but its a damn good switch that has high switching capacity (48 Gbps) a Lifetime Warranty with Next business day replacement.

It's not a managed switch though and it's almost twice the price of the TP-Link I'm considering, even factoring the lifetime next-day warranty, it's still not great value.

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