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3550 vs 3560

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netchaser

Technical User
May 3, 2007
20
US
I am in the middle of deciding a 3550 or 3560.

My main concern is the ability of either switch to handle 802.1x. According to a couple of Cisco Techs, 3550 should be able to do 802.1x just like the 3560.

I am looking at if there's any feature that's new or updated in the 3560 that I should be aware of. I know that the 3560, other than the obvious newer hardware and ASICs, can do hardware IPv6 routing, SRR, Multidomain Authentication and port based private vlans. Does anyone know if there are more features that are new to the 3560?

Thanks,
Thomson
 
Both do 802.1x ... if you are buying a new switch I would buy the 3560 as the 3550 will be end of sale and then end of life as the 3560 is the 3550's replacement.
 
Hey Brianinms,

I am working under a budget so it's a bit tough. That's why I am looking to see if there's any "special" or "new" feature sets in 3560 that I should consider over the 3550.
 
Working under a budget and implementing 802.1x don't seem to go had in had. Seeing that the 3550's are End of sale, were you considering buying them second hand? The main reason for buying 3560's is that you can cover them under smartnet. You could only get a used 3550 covered under smartnet after cisco certifies that it is in working condition, which is going to cost more than the 3560. In addition you could use a 2960 as it supports 802.1x.
 
Yes, I agree.

I guess my point is to see if there's anything on the 3560 that I should really consider to be "special features" that I can't get from 3550
 
Well even the fact you can run BGP on a 3560 is a good feature, but if you arent going to use it I wouldnt consider it special.
 
Just some differences between the 3550 and the 3560:

You can't do egress QoS (serice policies) on the 3560, you can on a 3550..... HSRP 32 instance limitation on the 3560, not on the 3550..... 12.2(25)SEE and earlier on 3560 suffers from pathetic TCP performance when QoS is enabled..... 3750 suffers from the same issues as well.

Personally I prefer the 3550 - far too advanced for it's day. However we are now stuck with the fact the 3550 is EOS (and will be EOL earlier than the 3560/3750) so the way forward has to be the 3560(E). Cisco have addressed (IMO) the main issue with the 3560/3750 (TCP performance with QoS enabled) in recent IOS so as long as you design the network correctly the 3560 fits right in where the 3550 did, plus it's up in the performance stakes....

Andy
 
Equipment that goes End Of Sale will have 5 years and 6 months before End Of Life, but only 5 years before you can no longer get SmartNet, and during that 5 years the coverage gets less and less.

Burt
 
3550 , as you can see they have already stopped development of the IOS model . Obsolete in 3 years and no support after that .

End-of-Life Announcement Date


The date the document that announces the end of sale and end of life of a product is distributed to the general public.


May 11, 2005

End-of-Sale Date


The last date to order the product through Cisco point-of-sale mechanisms. The product is no longer for sale after this date.


May 2, 2006

Last Shipment Date


The last-possible ship date that can be requested of Cisco and/or its contract manufacturers. Actual ship date is dependent on lead time.


August 2, 2006

End of Software Maintenance Releases Date


The last date that Cisco Engineering may release any final software maintenance releases or bug fixes. After this date, Cisco Engineering will no longer develop, repair, maintain, or test the product software.


May 2, 2007

End of Routine Failure Analysis Date


The last-possible date a routine failure analysis may be performed to determine the cause of product failure or defect.


May 2, 2007

End of New Service Attachment Date


For equipment and software that is not covered by a service-and-support contract, this is the last date to order a new service-and-support contract or add the equipment and/or software to an existing service-and-support contract.


May 2, 2007

End of Service Contract Renewal Date


The last date to extend or renew a service contract for the product. The extension or renewal period cannot extend beyond the last date of support.


February 2, 2011

Last Date of Support


The last date to receive service and support for the product. After this date, all support services for the product are unavailable, and the product becomes obsolete.
 
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