Hello...and thanks in advance as I'm new to this forum and this is my first post.
I am helping a condo assoc that has 84 units comprised in 11 separate buildings that wants to put an Ethernet jack in every unit so residents can simply plug in (or plug in their own router) and surf the internet. ...and Wife is not an option the assoc will consider. The buildings are situated in a line, so building 1 is approx 1/4 mile from building 11.
So, talking strictly of hard-wiring the association then (each building is connected to the next via direct Burial Cat5e)...the first question, is how much bandwidth would make sense assuming 84 units? My options from the local ISP (Charter) are 50Mbps and 100Mbps streams (5Mbps up in both cases). Let’s just say there are two connections per unit so 168 devices requesting bandwidth. We have no way of knowing what every connection would be requiring of the net, but this is assoc of mostly older people. Basic websites (news, weather, etc...) along with email and occasional facebook by some. In the summer grandkids visit, so god knows what that could bring but they are perfectly aware that it might be slower sometimes than others depending on the time (ie Labor Day Weekend would be slow).
Now where i start to get a little troubled is then if we have 2 internet streams coming into buildings 3 and 9, would there be the problem with cascaded switches for the two sections? IE the assoc's internet networking topology is broken into two sections (buildings 1-5 & 6-11). For example building 3 has the modem and routerh cascaded to a switch in building 2 which is cascaded to a switch in building 1...and going the other way cascading to 4 which is cascading to 5. Each buildings switch is then fed into 8 separate units. Within the unit then, a person would plug in their own personal router and go from there. Let me say that there isn't a budget for a stacked switch solution, but not sure if cascading like this would put definite breakdown on the outlying buildings (ie the further we get from the source, the more networking issues or slow internet). I would think that since no one device has more than a 3-4 hops to the internet it would be an issue, but again…this is where I get fuzzy on my knowledge.
Small visual with bold building numbers being where the internet source is
1-2-3-4-5 | 6-7-8-9-10-11
Assuming the above scenario would work, would then two 50Mbps internet transmissions feeding the two internet building sections work for the entire condo assoc? By my count each 50Mbps line would feed approx. 84 devices or 0.5Mbps per device which I’m thinking is fine. We’ll have no limiters, and doubt there would ever be a time that everyone is using the internet at the same time…so would think most times an individual would see a higher throughput….by the same token I guess a few cowboys streaming HD Netflix along with some Xbox would kill it for everyone.
Finally the routing and switching equipment that is planned on beings used are simple Cisco Small business devices (ie Routers = RV016 / Switches = sf100-16)
I know this is a lot of info, and hope I didn’t muddy it all to much. I appreciate any thoughts anyone may have regarding
Thanks again
greg
I am helping a condo assoc that has 84 units comprised in 11 separate buildings that wants to put an Ethernet jack in every unit so residents can simply plug in (or plug in their own router) and surf the internet. ...and Wife is not an option the assoc will consider. The buildings are situated in a line, so building 1 is approx 1/4 mile from building 11.
So, talking strictly of hard-wiring the association then (each building is connected to the next via direct Burial Cat5e)...the first question, is how much bandwidth would make sense assuming 84 units? My options from the local ISP (Charter) are 50Mbps and 100Mbps streams (5Mbps up in both cases). Let’s just say there are two connections per unit so 168 devices requesting bandwidth. We have no way of knowing what every connection would be requiring of the net, but this is assoc of mostly older people. Basic websites (news, weather, etc...) along with email and occasional facebook by some. In the summer grandkids visit, so god knows what that could bring but they are perfectly aware that it might be slower sometimes than others depending on the time (ie Labor Day Weekend would be slow).
Now where i start to get a little troubled is then if we have 2 internet streams coming into buildings 3 and 9, would there be the problem with cascaded switches for the two sections? IE the assoc's internet networking topology is broken into two sections (buildings 1-5 & 6-11). For example building 3 has the modem and routerh cascaded to a switch in building 2 which is cascaded to a switch in building 1...and going the other way cascading to 4 which is cascading to 5. Each buildings switch is then fed into 8 separate units. Within the unit then, a person would plug in their own personal router and go from there. Let me say that there isn't a budget for a stacked switch solution, but not sure if cascading like this would put definite breakdown on the outlying buildings (ie the further we get from the source, the more networking issues or slow internet). I would think that since no one device has more than a 3-4 hops to the internet it would be an issue, but again…this is where I get fuzzy on my knowledge.
Small visual with bold building numbers being where the internet source is
1-2-3-4-5 | 6-7-8-9-10-11
Assuming the above scenario would work, would then two 50Mbps internet transmissions feeding the two internet building sections work for the entire condo assoc? By my count each 50Mbps line would feed approx. 84 devices or 0.5Mbps per device which I’m thinking is fine. We’ll have no limiters, and doubt there would ever be a time that everyone is using the internet at the same time…so would think most times an individual would see a higher throughput….by the same token I guess a few cowboys streaming HD Netflix along with some Xbox would kill it for everyone.
Finally the routing and switching equipment that is planned on beings used are simple Cisco Small business devices (ie Routers = RV016 / Switches = sf100-16)
I know this is a lot of info, and hope I didn’t muddy it all to much. I appreciate any thoughts anyone may have regarding
Thanks again
greg