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Cisco CCNA CCNP CCIE Lab with 3xCISCO2811 WS-C2960-24TT-L WIC-2T Guiding DVD

$ 190.21

Availability: 37 in stock
  • Non-Domestic Product: No
  • Brand: Cisco
  • Condition: Used
  • Custom Bundle: No
  • Modified Item: No

    Description

    Item descriptions
    Cisco CCNA CCNP CCIE Lab with 3xCISCO2811 WS-C2960-24TT-L WIC-2T and Guiding DVD Free IP Phone
    1 Year Warranty
    +++ Fully Tested and Refurbished by a CCNP +++
    +++ Fast Shipping inner Sydney +++
    Items Included In Sale
    3 x CISCO2811 router with 15.1 IOS
    (CCIE Grade router, good investment for future CCNP/CCIE study)
    3 x WS-C2960-24TT-L with IOS
    c2960-lanbasek9-mz.150-2.SE11.bin
    (CCIE grade switch, good investment for future CCNP/CCIE study)
    1 x Cisco USB RS232 Serial to RJ45 Console Cable
    Connect the USB port from your PC/Laptop directly
    to the Cisco device's console port
    3 x WIC-2T Interface Cards (or Dual Port DSU-1T/MFT-E1 Cards - Better than WIC-2T)
    3 x CAB-SS-2626X-3FT Cable for WIC-2T (or T1 DSU Serial Crossover Cable for Dual Port DSU-T1/MFT-T1/E1)
    6 x Power Cable
    3 x Network Cables
    *Free 1x IP Phone*
    We reserve the right to upgrade any or all equipment listed above with equal or higher models depending on availability.
    Bonus 18.5GB Guiding Data
    CONTENT
    (worth of TWO DVDs) which provides:
    SDM Software
    TFTP Software
    Labs common Questions and Answers, manuals and configuration examples
    Main Features
    This kit has the best value for your CCNA & CCNP study which meets all requirements for both certifications. It is also easy for you to upgrade security
    bundle to
    this kit by simply adding Firewalls.
    Are you looking for a Firewall Lab Kit?
    Click here
    Why Physical Switches and Routers are NEEDED?
    Real hardware vs Simulator (GNS3, Packet Tracer, etc.)
    If you are new to networking and/or Cisco and never worked with their routers/switches before, it is crucial to obtain real hardware. You will get a feeling of what it’s likely to work with real routers and switches, cable everything, etc.
    *The simulators (GNS3, Packet Tracer, etc.) don't have the ability to give you the hands on.
    *You need to see what happens when you connect/disconnect a cable.
    *You may put a cable in the wrong location or just plain configure the interface incorrectly.
    *Depends on what you do by mistakes, you may see either the interface or protocol go down.
    *You can do troubleshoot based upon that it should give you a clue of where to start troubleshooting.
    *You can see which layer is the interface at and which layer is the protocol at.
    *You can find the mistake so quick that you have made on Router 1, which could affect other Routers.
    *No simulator can simulate that, so physical routers and switches are invaluable.
    How many physical devices should you use?
    There are many different opinions and honestly, they all kind of make sense, but the bottom line to this is simple: get as many as you can. This is a list of the most common topologies.
    A single device
    Some people recommend buying at least one router or one switch. I agree that having one device would be better than having none, so if you cannot afford a full lab but would still like to play with some real hardware, get at least one router or one switch.
    Of course, you won’t be able to implement concepts like VLAN trunks or OSPF, but you will get an idea of what it means to deal with real Cisco equipment when it comes to configuring a single device.
    One switch and one router
    Now you can play with inter-VLAN routing, but anything related to IP route propagation will be out of the question.
    Two switches and one router
    Here you can also play with spanning tree and some VTP, but once again, no serious routing.
    This is a very popular combination on Ebay (I suspect because the price of such a lab can usually be kept very low), but if you can only afford three devices, I would personally go with the next option rather than with this one (i.e. one switch and two routers).
    One switch and two routers
    More popular than the previous option, this one makes more sense to me. You are losing the ability to play with advanced switching concepts, but you can start applying some “advanced” routing topics such as static routes and OSPF.
    This is a good compromise, I think, that allows you to play with a bunch of different concepts without breaking the bank buying real equipment.
    If your focus is routing rather than switching (perhaps because you are already a switching guru), you could also think about replacing the switch with a third router, to get the benefits mentioned in the next topology (one switch and three routers).
    Two switches and two routers
    A very good middle ground. With this topology you will be able to do most basic things but you are only going to miss advanced scenarios.
    Three switches and three routers
    This is the best of the best for your CCNA study. With three switches and three routers you can do pretty much every lab recommended for the CCNA.
    If you are serious about building a lab, and perhaps you want to move on and get some other Cisco certifications in the future, this is an option that might be worth considering.
    CCNA
    v3 Updated Exam August 2016
    100-101 to 100-105 ICND1
    200-101 to 200-105 ICND2
    200-120 to 200-125 Composite
    Cisco made CCNA 200-125 V3 exam harder than the CCNA 200-120 V2 exam. Cisco wants to make sure you really know your stuff on this exam. CCNA 200-125 V3 exam includes multiple choice, multiple answer, drag-n-drop, interactive router simulations, testlet and simlet question types. Especially, you need to study with actual devices for understanding interactive router simulations, testlet and simlet question types. You need to have a high-level understanding of what is happening for passing the exam. You need to practice on more complex setups and you need to understand very well what is happening. That is why we set up these lab kits and provide you to work with actual devices.
    Changes in the new CCNA v3 200-125 exam includes
    WAN connectivity is now a single-homed eBGP connection. Cuz ISPs use BGP and you are dropping old Telco TDM technologies for faster connectivity.
    LAN switching topics are the same. Emphasis on security features: 802.1x, DHCP snooping, nondefault native VLAN.
    Routing is the same. Router on a stick, SVI, Link-state vs Distance vector, Interior vs Exterior, OSPFv2 and v3, EIGRP IPv4 and IPv6.
    WAN technologies. Frame-Relay is dead. You still have PPP, MLPPP, PPPoE and GRE tunnels. WAN connectivity is now MPLS, MetroE, Broadband PPPoE and VPNs.
    Major change in WAN technology is the need to configure and verify single-homed branch office connectivity using eBGP IPv4 (limited to peering and route advertisement using Network command only).
    Infrastructure services, configure and verify basic HSRP.
    New additions are Cloud related topics, traffic path to internal and external services, virtual services.
    Basic QoS terms and functions.
    Verify ACLs using the APIC-EM Path Trace ACL analysis tool.
    Infrastructure Maintenance, SNMPv2 and v3, IP SLA, SPAN, AAA
    Newly added is network programmability, function of a controller, northbound and southbound APIs.
    Also included a BONUS DVD.
    This DVD gives you:

    1. Complete practice labs which can be easily accomplished on the equipment you purchase.

    2. Instructional material including current books and videos so you can understand what to do.

    3. Utilities such as SDM software/TFTP software/Console Emulation that you will need to manage and configure the equipment.

    CCNA Routing and Switching
    CCNA Composite Exam: The 200-125 is the composite exam associated with the Cisco CCNA Routing and Switching certification. This exam tests a candidate's knowledge and skills required to install, operate, and troubleshoot a small to medium size enterprise branch network. The topics include all the areas covered under ICND1 and ICND2 Exams.
    200-120 CCNA Composite
    100-105 ICND1
    200-101 ICND2
    The exams above have been now replaced with the following exams:
    200-125 CCNA Composite
    100-105 ICND1
    200-105 ICND2
    To obtain a CCNA Routing and Switching you must pass two written exams or one composite exam.
    Interconnecting Cisco Networking Devices Part 1 (ICND1)
    Interconnecting Cisco Networking Devices Part 2 (ICND2)
    200-125 CCNA Composite
    Both focus on providing the skills and knowledge necessary to implement and support a small switched and routed network.
    Important notice for students/consumers:
    #1:
    IPv6 over RIP or OSPF which is super current and definitely will be on your exam. Plus yes it is here! IPv4 exhaustion already happened...
    The top-level exhaustion occurred on 31 January 2011. Three of the five RIRs have exhausted allocation of all the blocks they have not reserved for IPv6 transition; this occurred for the Asia-Pacific on 15 April 2011, for Europe on 14 September 2012, and for Latin America and the Caribbean on 10 June 2014. Meaning when your ISP requests a block of new IP Addresses they can only get IPv6 addresses. Meaning that sh^t will be coming onto your network or the networks you work on real soon. So unless you are over 50 or are young and planning an early death you will be swimming in IPv6 soon. So yes you really really need it!
    #2: Never Accept WIC-2A/S Interfaces In Your Lab!
    WIC-1DSU-56K
    Neither  T1/E1
    56K
    Impossibly Slow
    1/24 of T1 Speed
    Bad
    WIC-2A/S
    Neither  T1/E1
    128k
    Impossibly Slow
    1/12 of T1 Speed
    Bad
    WIC-1DSU-T1
    T1 Only
    1.544Mbps
    USA Standard
    T1 Speed
    Good
    WIC-1T
    T1/E1
    1.544/2048Mbps
    USA/EU Standard
    T1 or E1 Speed
    Good
    WIC-2T
    T1/E1
    1.544/2048Mbps
    USA/EU Standard
    T1 or E1 Speed
    Good
    VWIC-1MFT           T1/E1
    1.544/2048Mbps
    USA/EU Standard
    T1 or E1 Speed
    Too Good
    WIC-2A/S 128k serial interfaces are NOT T1 interfaces (the maximum speed is 1/12th the speed of a T1).
    True T1 is ridiculously slow at 1.544 Mbps and thankfully all serial connections are gradually disappearing. However T1's dominates legacy networking and some installations will out live all of you because it has been the standard since Bell Labs introduced the technology in 1962 more than 52 years ago. So you should have experience in your lab with T1 interfaces and links. Not just serial interfaces (like the WIC-2A/S) but with T1 interfaces and links the industry standard for half a century.
    WIC-2A/S most commonly used for modem backup so a technician can dial into the router with a modem in case the TCP/IP connection (i.e. telnet and SSH) is down.
    Danger: Never Accept WIC-2A/S Interfaces In Your Lab!
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    When multiplies items are purchased in one order, the item will be combined into one big bundle to reduce the shipping cost as least as possible.
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    International Shipping
    Overseas customers please contact us for shipping costs.
    Costs such as duties, taxes, brokerages fee and additional tariffs or charges are buyer’s responsibility.
    Delivery time is 2-3 days to most countries by either Australia Post, TNT, and UPS
    1 Year for end users within Australia
    30 Days for international buyers and brokers
    We will provide a replacement unit for items under warranty.
    Customer is responsibility for returning the faulty unit back to us.
    It may take 5-7 working days to replace the faulty unit. We will ship the replacement unit out to you.
    We accept returns within 7 days you change your mind or have purchased it by mistake. There will be a 25% re-stocking fee and it is the buyer’s responsibility to return the unit in its original form. If any changes have been made to the unit, we will reject the return.
    Customer satisfaction is our top priority. If the description we described did not match what you received, the item will be exchanged or refunded.
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