My thoughts exactly.  "But we'll have two spares", I heard.

Bryan  

-----Original Message-----
From: pctech-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:pctech-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx]On
Behalf Of Mike
Sent: Thursday, October 26, 2006 11:06 AM
To: PC Technical Discussion for iSeries Users
Subject: Re: [PCTECH] Ethernet cabling and switches


Would you honestly trust a $20 port for a obviously mission-critical system?
Go with the full 24 port switch. Consumer-grade is reliable, but
business-grade is more so.

On 10/26/06, Burns, Bryan <Bryan_Burns@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

What's the best practice with respect to Ethernet cabling and
switches?  At what point do you cable a homerun instead of switch, upon
switch, upon switch?

We'll soon be adding one thin client and one Zebra label printer to 11
final assembly lines and we need to run network drops.  The printers will be
a critical component of the assembly lines;  if a printer is not working,
the entire assembly line will shutdown. It's been suggested that we buy some
cheapo $20 four port switches and put them at each line and use an existing
drop to connect the switch.

The alternative is to run two home run Ethernet cables from a switch
cabinet located on a post in the assembly area to each assembly line.   But
we'll have to buy a 24 port switch and add a patch panel panel.




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