Solid practice set with clear explanations. I’ve been sharing CCNA walkthroughs too — always good to see how others break down the questions.
Thank you for this helpful material. If you can, start the text from little bit down. I paused this video many time for understanding. When i paused video topic name hides part of question. I have to make the screen smaller for read question.
This is REAL GOOD!😃👍💯
Thank you very much for this lessons. I wish to buy you coffee someday 😀
Q26 @ 7:25:57 the answer should be C for trunk mode according to AI, can you please clarify you answer as C? You are correct to question the author's selection of D (access mode)! In the context of a centralized wireless architecture with lightweight APs, access mode is generally incorrect for the switch port connecting to the AP. Here's why the author's choice is incorrect and why C. trunk is the proper mode: Lightweight APs and VLANs: In a centralized (or split-MAC) wireless architecture, lightweight APs act as simple radio transceivers. They forward all wireless client traffic, as well as their own management traffic, back to the Wireless LAN Controller (WLC). Different SSIDs (wireless networks) on the AP are typically mapped to different VLANs. For instance, you might have a "Staff" SSID in VLAN 10 and a "Guest" SSID in VLAN 20. Access Port Limitation: An access mode switch port can only carry traffic for one single VLAN. If you configure the switch port connected to the AP as an access port, it means that AP can only bridge traffic for that one VLAN. This would prevent the AP from supporting multiple SSIDs mapped to different VLANs, or it would prevent the AP from communicating with the WLC on its management VLAN while also forwarding client traffic. Trunk Port Necessity: A trunk mode switch port, on the other hand, is designed to carry traffic for multiple VLANs. It uses 802.1Q (or similar tagging) to identify which VLAN each frame belongs to. This is precisely what's needed for a lightweight AP: The AP needs to send and receive management traffic to/from the WLC on its management VLAN. The AP needs to encapsulate and send traffic from wireless clients (which might be in various different VLANs) back to the WLC. The WLC, in turn, sends traffic for these different VLANs to the AP. All this multi-VLAN traffic traverses the single physical link between the switch and the AP, making a trunk port essential. Conclusion: The author's selection of D. access is incorrect. While it might simplify initial setup if you only have one VLAN for all wireless clients and management, it does not support the typical multi-VLAN requirements of a centralized wireless architecture with lightweight APs. The industry standard and correct configuration for the switch port connected to a lightweight AP is C. trunk mode, to allow the passage of multiple VLANs.
Thank you Sir !
In this video are the total question for CCNA? or there are others videos... thanks
Q4. 2:35:20 why was D selected over C being the longest prefix? Is it because the address was the network ID? Or was the question intended for falling into a usable ip address range?
Thanks I would love you to send me profession certificate such as I s
Hello! The questions are similar in exam real ?
Hey sir, is that real 2025 CCNA exam questions ? My exam date is 20 days later. I'm studying but if CCNA exams questions if this difficulty, i will be relaxed. Pls reply
Sir please start CISA CISM or CCISP
Problem is with your accent but good job all the same
@elik558