If you really need it, a much more effective method to get short term relief is to squeeze some of the "history" out of the forwarding table. The 192.* block, and some of the high 190's, look like swamps that are ripe for the picking.
This is a though I've been mulling over for a while. Why not have the IANA set a "flag day" for the 192 space. Say, on 1 March 97, the 192.0.0.0/8 space will no longer be routable. At this point, the IANA, then sits on the space, now removed from the routing tables, and reassigns it at a later date. OR Just make 192.0.0.0/8 rfc1597 type of address space? Just a thought that would need more serious discussion to implement. Eric -- Eric Kozowski Structured Network Systems, Inc. kozowski@structured.net Better, Cheaper, Faster -- pick any two. (503)656-3530 Voice "Providing High Quality, Reliable Internet Service" (800)881-0962 Voice 56k to DS1