Daniel,
   There are different modular interfaces you can purchase for the RDS.
i.e.. we have RS-449 and RS-232. The RDS sits between two routed interfaces
and acts as the DCE. The cables you need are DTE for the router and the
interface style you purchase for the RDS (should be the standard cables you
use now). The bandwidth and latency are changed through dip switches on the
front panel of the RDS.
    The only downside we found was the bandwidth speed that tops out at
2.048 Mbps. Adtech has a more advanced product that can scale up but the
price difference is hefty.
    We have been very happy with the product and it allows us to test
applications to specific "what if" scenarios. The tech support at East Coast
Datacom's was also very responsive any time we called in with questions.

        Hope this helps
                Aloha
                    Shawn

----- Original Message -----
From: "Daniel Cotts" 
To: "'Shawn Goodson'" ; 
Sent: Thursday, May 31, 2001 6:54 AM
Subject: RE: latency in a lab scenario [7:6453]


> Did this connection reqire any special cables or configuration? It appears
> to use standard V.35 DTE cables. Where does the line clocking come from?
> TIA
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Shawn Goodson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> > Sent: Thursday, May 31, 2001 11:54 AM
> > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Subject: Re: latency in a lab scenario [7:6453]
> >
> >
> > There was an earlier post that described East Coast Datacom's
> > Router Delay
> > Simulator. We have been using the RDS in our lab to provide
> > latency and
> > bandwidth constraints between endpoints. The box has worked
> > great and the
> > pricing wasn't bad.
> >
> http://www.ecdata.com/rds/rds.htm
>
>                     Shawn




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