No. You only have 250 addresses according to the numbers. What you have described is 65533 addresses. Your numbers (10.1.1.1 - 10.1.1.252) would indicate that the 10.X.X.X network is subnetted down to a 255.255.255.0; or, you have a only been allocated the 10.1.1.0 network.
I need at least 600 - 700 ip's using a class A ip address. Starting with 10.1.1. How can I set this range up for my DHCP server and what would my subnet mask be?
I used the range below: But I'm only getting 678 ip's. Is the subnet mask 255.255.252.0 correct? Should it be 255.255.0.0..Should this give me more network then host.
If I were you, I'd use 10.1.1.1 - 10.1.3.254 with a subnet mask of 255.255.252.0, which would give you 1022 valid IP addresses.
Your network ID would be 10.1.0.0, subnet mask 255.255.252.0. This is going to create problems for you unless your router supports "ip subnet zero" routing. This will give 1022 addresses, with 10.1.0.1 as your first address and 10.1.3.254 as your last address.
If you want to be safe use 10.1.4.0 255.255.252.0. This will put you in the first real usable subnet when subnetting.
BTW--
How many users are on a single segment? It is great to have a large range of addresses to choose from, but, the more users, the more broadcasts. This can have real impact on the network.
Usse this free calculator to determine your net and sub. This is free and easy to use. just enter the net id and subnet mask desired and it will give you the net id, first usable address, last usable address, and broadcast address.
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