Nortel BayStack 450-12F, BayStack 450-12T, BayStack 450-24T, Baystack 410-24T Specifications

BayStack* 410 and 450 Switches are stackable Ethernet switches featuring fail-safe stackability, flexible choices for high-speed uplinks, and advanced software features.
BayStack 450 Switches are designed to provide high-density, high-performance switching for enterprise wiring closets, and to provide fail-safe scalability and advanced traffic management for rapidly growing networks in demanding environments.
The BayStack 410-24T Switch is an affordable, stackable 10BASE-T switch solution for growing network environments and features fail-safe stackability with the BayStack 450 Switches.
BayStack 410 and 450 Switches also include advanced features such as VLAN trunking, priority queuing, and IGMP snooping. BayStack 450 Switches and Accelar* Routing Switches also provide network resilience and advanced management with MultiLink Trunking, LinkSafe* redundant uplink ports, RMON on every port, complete integration into Optivity* network management software, and easy-to-use GUI management.
Stackable Up to 8 Units and 224 Ports
Fail-Safe Cascade Stacking Architecture
Flexible Uplink Options
BayStack
410 and 450 Switches
Product Brief
BayStack 410 and 450 Switches Data Sheet2
Figure 1: In the unlikely event
of a switch failure, the stack integrity is maintained: cascade signals loop back at point of failure.
Table 1: Port, MDA, and Stacking Module Slot Configurations
of the BayStack 410 and 450 Switches.
Autosensing
Cascade
10BASE-T/ Stacking
100BASE-TX MDA Module
BayStack Switches Ports Slot Slot
BayStack 450-12T 12 1 1
BayStack 450-24T 24 1 1
Baystack 410-24T 24 (10BASE-T only) 1 1
BayStack 450-12F 12 (100BASE-FX only) 1 1
optimal speed, each switched port also automatically detects and supports full-duplex connections to servers, power-user endstations or other switches as well as half-duplex connections to legacy NICs or hubs. The BayStack 410-24T Switch is a cost-effective, stackable switch that supports 24 10BASE-T ports.
High-Density Fiber Ports
The BayStack 450-12F Switch has twelve 100BASE-FX mini MT-RJ ports, one MDA slot, and a cascade module slot. Up to eight BayStack 450-12F Switches can be stacked to achieve up to 128 100BASE-FX ports (with 4-port 100BASE-FX MDA on each switch). The BayStack 450-12F Switch can also be stacked with the BayStack 410-24T, 450-12T, and 450-24T Switches to accommodate flexible networks.
Redundant Cascade Stacking Architecture
Unlike other stacking switches, BayStack 410 and 450 Switches are designed with a fail-safe cascade stacking architecture (see Figure 1). Cascade cables connect up to 8 stacked switches into a self-healing configuration that protects the stack’s connectivity by looping connection
As described in Table 1, BayStack 450 Switches are available in 24- and 12-port configurations, each with a Media Dependent Adapter (MDA) slot, as well as a cascade stacking module slot. The BayStack 410-24T has 24 10BASE-T ports, one MDA slot, and one cascade stacking module slot.
Features and Benefits
Flexible High-Speed Uplink Options
100BASE-FX and 10BASE-T/100BASE­TX MDAs for the BayStack 410 and 450 Switches provide high-speed connections to the network center. Specifically for the BayStack 450 Switches, Gigabit Ethernet and future ATM uplinks provide greater speed connections to the backbone.
Full Autosensing on Every Port
Every UTP port on the BayStack 450-12T and 450-24T Switches are equipped with autosense technology to automatically detect and support the speed and mode of a connected device. As well as automatically determining whether a connected device is operating at 10 Mbps or 100 Mbps and automatically adjusting to the
signals back at a point of failure. In the unlikely event of a switch failure, all other units in a stack remain operational without interruption.
The redundant cascade stacking architecture is a safer, smarter alternative to current “matrix” stacking switches, which suffer from a single point of failure design flaw — should the base unit fail, all connectivity to all switches in the stack is lost.
Wire-speed Throughput
2.5 Gigabit per second (Gbps) switching fabric and custom switching ASICs support full 802.1D-compliant MAC Layer frame forwarding and filtering across all ports at the peak rate of 3 million packets per second for the BayStack 450 Switches. The non-blocking architecture of the BayStack 410-24T Switch allows packets to be forwarded at 1 million packets per second.
BayStack 410 and 450 Switches Data Sheet 3
Figure 2: High-density 10/100/1000 switching in the wiring closet,
featuring fail-safe stackability and MultiLink Trunking for redundant connections to local servers and the network center.
BayStack 410 & 450 Switches
MultiLink Trunking across stack for multi-Gigabit, load-balancing connectivity to local servers and the network center.
Accelar™ 1200 Switch
1 Gbps
100 Mbps
10 Mbps
100 Mbps
100 Mbps
and redundancy. Should one port connection fail, other connections within the MultiLink Trunk assume the full traffic load seamlessly. MultiLink Trunking also allows servers and critical resources to be connected to different switches in the stack to achieve “Multi-Homing,” whereby link redundancy is extended to include unit redundancy, resulting in highly available critical resources (see Figure 2).
• Each switch includes a Redundant Power Supply Unit connection. Should the switch’s built-in power supply fail, the Nortel Networks RPSU (sold separately) will automatically supply power to the switch for uninterrupted operation.
MultiLink Trunking
Enables grouping of links between the switch and another switch or a server to provide higher bandwidth of up to 800 Mbps (when used with 10/100 ports or 100BASE-FX ports) or up to 8 Gigabits
per second (when used with Gigabit uplink ports on BayStack 450 Switches) with active redundant links. Trunked ports can span multiple units of the stack for fail-safe connectivity to mission­critical servers and the network center.
IGMP Snooping
The BayStack 410 and 450 Switches feature a new level of efficient IP MultiCast support by examining (‘snooping’) all IGMP traffic in hardware at line rate, and pruning unwanted data streams from affecting network or endstation performance.
Enterprise-sized MAC Address Table
BayStack 410 and 450 Switches support more than 16,000 MAC addresses per switch for deployment of large-scale enterprise networks with many attached devices and workgroups connected to each switch. (In a full 802.1Q environment, 32,000 MAC addresses are supported.)
Advanced VLAN Support
Up to 64 port-based or protocol-based VLANs can be established for each switch, to extend the broadcast domain and segment network traffic.
Protocol-based VLANs allow switch ports to be assigned to a broadcast domain, based on the protocol information within the packet. These VLANs can localize broadcast traffic and assure that the specified protocol type packets are sent only to the protocol-based VLAN ports.
802.1Q VLAN Trunking
VLAN trunking is supported on every port of the switch, allowing efficient means of transporting broadcast domains across switches.
802.1p Priority Queuing
Standards-based priority queuing enables prioritization of multimedia or latency-sensitive traffic, making possible integration of voice, video, and data within the same network.
Fail-Safe Design Features
• Redundant cascade stacking architecture.
• Each unit in the stack has a full copy of the stack configuration so in the unlikely event of any unit failure, operation of the stack continues without affecting application connectivity.
• Gigabit uplinks (for BayStack 450 Switches only) feature LinkSafe, which provides two different physical fiber connectors for each Gigabit uplink. Upon primary path failure, the traffic is diverted to the redundant path in microseconds, protecting critical Gigabit Ethernet connections to servers or the network center.
• MultiLink Trunking can be implemented across the stack, where connections between individual devices (for example, between a BayStack 450 Switch and an Accelar 1200 Routing Switch) can be aggregated for both higher bandwidth
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