Imagestream has been very good to us as well.  Every bit the "Cisco
experience", but at a fraction of the cost.  Reliability has been excellent.
They hum along year after year.

 

 

From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
Behalf Of Justin Wilson
Sent: Wednesday, July 06, 2011 3:36 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Choosing core router for small - medium WISP

 

            I have used Imagestream routers in what I would consider carrier
situations. Have had Imagestreams in VRRP running multiple BGP full feeds
and Gigs of traffic per second.  Not saying it's a do all solution, but is a
serious contender.  Add on top the fact you don't need $1000's of dollars a
year for smartnet I am happy.  Not saying it's your solution, but definitely
worth looking at.

 

            Justin

-- 

Justin Wilson <j...@mtin.net> 
Aol & Yahoo IM: j2sw
http://www.mtin.net/blog - xISP News
http://www.twitter.com/j2sw - Follow me on Twitter
Wisp Consulting - Tower Climbing - Network Support

 

From: Bryan Fields <br...@apacimports.com>
Reply-To: WISPA General List <wireless@wispa.org>
Date: Wed, 06 Jul 2011 15:05:10 -0400
To: WISPA General List <wireless@wispa.org>
Cc: Roman <consulttele...@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Choosing core router for small - medium WISP

 

On 7/6/2011 10:52, Roman wrote: 

I would like to ask for help of wireless community. 

We have to choose supplier of core router for our WISP projects. I know
technical characteristics and price for core routers from Cisco - 7200 and
7600 series. Although these models have impressive possibilities, their
price is very prohibitive for small/medium projects. Which models of core
router do use in your projects? I would like to get your recommendations,
its advantages and disadvantages. Would like to know some cheap and
middle-price options.


It comes down to the feature set you need and the performance required.  Can
you share your expected traffic numbers and what features you want to run?

The cisco 7200 is a bit long in the tooth, the 7600 is the way to go
forward.  Each can be found on the secondary market for cheap.  From a new
device purchase decision, it's hard to beat the Juniper SRX series for
smaller deployments.  a $1500 router can handle 300 mbit/s of IP/mpls and
firewall in hardware is hard to beat.  The new MX series can handle
80gb/slot and its the next big competition to the 7600 from cisco.  Junos is
amazing to work with compared to IOS too.

However if you do need multiple line rate 10gb/s interfaces, the ALU
7750/7710 should be considered too.

I'd not consider the Imagestream product as it's not a serious carrier
contender.  As of two years back they just did not have a product, and bowed
out of an RFP I was forced into running.  It's a neat small office router,
but that's all.  

Again this is all my opinion :)

-- 
Bryan Fields
APAC Imports LLC
Phone: 800-721-6502
Fax: 727-493-1511
http://apacimports.com

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