Juniper Networks
10G/40G/100G QSFP28, FULL L3VPN, HQOS
Out of Stock
Juniper MPC7EQ-MRATE-RB 10G/40G/100G QSFP28 | L3VPN, HQoS, Enterprise
Juniper Networks
MPN: MPC7EQ-MRATE-RB
$511,427.90$590,400.00
Free shipping on orders over $500
Authorized Dealer — Full manufacturer warranty
Key Features
- Juniper Networks MPC7EQ-MRATE-RB expansion module
- 10G/40G/100G QSFP28 optical connectivity
- Full L3VPN support
- HQoS traffic management
- 40 Gigabit Ethernet technology
- Optical fiber media support
- Plug-in module form factor
- 1-year limited warranty
Add dense optical capacity where routing demands keep rising. The Juniper MPC7EQ-MRATE-RB expansion module brings 10G, 40G, and 100G QSFP28 support to platforms designed for serious data networking workloads. Full L3VPN capability helps maintain segmented services across shared infrastructure, while HQoS supports predictable traffic handling when multiple applications compete for bandwidth.
Built for optical network deployments, this module is a strong fit for teams that need to scale throughput without redesigning the core. Its plug-in form factor simplifies integration into supported Juniper systems, making it easier to expand capacity in place rather than replace the platform. For organizations comparing lower-cost modules, the value here is in service density, traffic control, and the ability to support higher-speed uplinks with the policy features expected in enterprise routing environments.
When uptime, segmentation, and traffic prioritization matter, this module gives network teams the headroom to grow with fewer compromises.
Ideal For
- Core and edge routing upgrades in enterprise data centers
- Optical network expansion for higher-speed aggregation links
- Service-provider environments requiring L3VPN segmentation
- Traffic-prioritized deployments where HQoS is required
Why This Product
- 1Supports 10G, 40G, and 100G QSFP28 in one module family
- 2Includes full L3VPN for segmented service delivery
- 3Adds HQoS for traffic prioritization under load
- 4Designed for optical fiber deployments rather than basic access routing
