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Linksys or Cisco for SOHO router ?

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JF Mezei

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Jun 29, 2009, 7:39:19 AM6/29/09
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I am looking to replace my SOHO router. I am looking at one which would
have 802.11n if possible. No need for built-in ADSL router. And I would
prefer IOS if possible.

But I don't have a million dollars to spend -:(

Is the 500 series ( SR520W-FE-K9 )
the only affordable Cisco router ?

This only only has 802.11g wireless.

Or am I restricted to Linksys products in the affordable range if I want
something new ?

If I drop wireless requirement from a router, would there be any
difference between an older router off ebay and a new SR520 ?

Any used router models you would recommend if I am to seek it off ebay ?


Doug McIntyre

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Jun 29, 2009, 11:21:40 AM6/29/09
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JF Mezei <jfmezei...@vaxination.ca> writes:
>I am looking to replace my SOHO router. I am looking at one which would
>have 802.11n if possible. No need for built-in ADSL router. And I would
>prefer IOS if possible.

>But I don't have a million dollars to spend -:(

Oh, you can get quite alot of decent cisco hardware for less than a
million dollars. :)

>Is the 500 series ( SR520W-FE-K9 )
> the only affordable Cisco router ?

Affordable for you might be quite a bit different than affordable for
somebody else... Cisco doesn't seem interested in going after the $100
router market..

>This only only has 802.11g wireless.

Cisco is late to the .11n game, AFAIK, they only have one AP barely
shipping that supports .11n. I wouldn't expect it to perculate down to
all their product lines yet. OOTH, they do things like let you have
8-10 SSIDs on different VLANs, and other things that no consumer grade
gear is ever going to support. Only 2 beacon SSIDs, but still that is
more than Linksys is going to do.

>Or am I restricted to Linksys products in the affordable range if I want
>something new ?

You'd have to define what kind of throughput and features you want.
For alot of things now-a-days, I wouldn't even look at a router
for a network, and use a firewall product instead.

>If I drop wireless requirement from a router, would there be any
>difference between an older router off ebay and a new SR520 ?

People assume all cisco routers are built for what they want to use
them for, which is far from the truth. Many routers out there have
pretty poor throughput, much less than people expect. Ie. you pick up
a 2610, and you'll be looking at pushing 5-6Mbps through it. If you
happen to have like a 30Mbps cable connection, its going to be a huge
limitation for you.

You have to define what you are trying to do, and you expect to match
with the very specialized defined Cisco hardware, rather than just
you want a general router. As I said above, a firewall product may
very well support you better.

Thrill5

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Jun 29, 2009, 8:28:32 PM6/29/09
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Most of the 870 series routers can be had for less than $300. The Linksys
are cheaper, but given the choice I tell customers to spend an extra $150
and get the Cisco. It's cheaper because I will charge them more for
support in the long run. With a Cisco, it's pretty easy to diagnose a
problem (if you know what your doing), while with the linksys its a lot of
guessing. The Cisco also supports just about anything they would even need
to do, while the LinkSys does things only one way and if what you need to do
doesn't fit into that mold your s**t-out-of-luck.


"Doug McIntyre" <mer...@geeks.org> wrote in message
news:4a48dc04$0$18869$8046...@newsreader.iphouse.net...

Andy Doe

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Jul 6, 2009, 2:20:08 AM7/6/09
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> Most of the 870 series routers can be had for less than $300.

Well but throughput is an Issue on the 870 Series. I am hooked up to a 100
Mbit FTTP Connection but the Router (871) is barely
pushing 15 Mbit through the line. If you turn of IOS-FW and NAT you might
get more but I recently got me an ASA in order
to get my througput.

Best...Andy


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