backup internet line

Jul 12, 2001
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This is copied from an email a friend sent me...anyone know?

My boss at work has a T1 line connected to his house from the greenwich capital building in greenwich that keeps going down. I'd like to add a cable modem to his home to add a degree of redundancy. Can you buy a router that can accept a T1 line and a cable modem line and then connect it to a pc so that the pc continues to have access to the internet if the t1 goes down?
 

Soybomb

Diamond Member
Jun 30, 2000
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Why not fix the problem that is the T1 going down? That shouldn't be happening.
 

cmetz

Platinum Member
Nov 13, 2001
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No circuit has 100% uptime, even a T1, so some redundancy might be appropriate. If you want strict failover, that is a much easier problem than trying to make real use of both at once.

A Cisco 2600 series (2600XM for example) with two Ethernet ports and a T1 CSU port would work well here, just configure two default routes, where the one towards the T1 has a lower metric than the other, and appropriate NAT magic to NAT if necessary for each line (probably needed for the cable line, don't know about the T1).
 

Kremlar

Golden Member
Oct 10, 1999
1,426
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I haven't tried one yet, but Hawking Technologies has their FR24 dual port WAN router that sounds like it would do what you ask.

Ridiculously cheap, well under $100.

Does it work well? No idea yet.
 

labgeek

Platinum Member
Jan 20, 2002
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http://www.nexland.com/turbo.cfm

? First Home/Small Business Router with Dual Modem Connections
? Surf & Download Multiple Files/MP3s at DOUBLE the Speed
? Each Connection Backs Up the Other Should One Go Down - Auto Failover
? Mix Cable/DSL/SDSL/T1 Internet Connection Types
...
? Auto-Dialing Analog/ISDN Serial Port for Third Backup
 

bozo1

Diamond Member
May 21, 2001
6,364
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That Nexland product sounds cool. Unfortunately, looks like Symantec just munched them and their site doesn't have any Nexland info yet. :(