Jump to content

Rhyst9

Member
  • Posts

    9
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Awards

This user doesn't have any awards

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Queensland, Australia
  • Interests
    Tech, Cars, Dogs
  • Biography
    Tech for a Telco in Rural Aus.
  • Occupation
    Technician

Rhyst9's Achievements

  1. Agree that they maybe bent more than the technical spec of the cable, I doubt that those bends would have caused any serious damage and probably work just fine, but as stated it should be avoided to limit an issues.
  2. Where in Aus are you? RMIT in Melbourne do some really good courses! I would suggest CCNA as a start the most widely recognized will help get your foot in the door somewhere and then tailor your learning to the path, but also get a good Linux grasp as well not sure on official training but really comes in handy.
  3. The bends that they were shouldn't be an issue, also isn't COAX, it's just stranded copper.
  4. Like most stuff Cisco parts are made by multiple vendors/batches with revisions. So very well should be identical electrically. As for the bend would be a problem, you should avoid tight bends in cables but they are pretty flexible.
  5. All i'm saying is your Subnet mask can't be 255.255.255.255 on the Gateway IP. What is the WAN IP of the device? Can you share the exact setting of each router?
  6. Maybe a silly Question but do the LTE router and other router share the same subnet because that doesn't look right with a mask 255.255.255.255 would give 0 addresses? I have a very similar setup with an MR1100(Telstra) to a Ubiquiti ERLite‑3 as a backup.
×