If you are wall fishing anyway, pull liquitite, if youre opening the walls put in PVC. This way you can change as technology changes.
We are a leviton shop, went there when product sourcing on molex became problematic for a while, I like the leviton products way better, cleaner look, less parts. We only do modular patch panels, that way you can replace questionable jacks and mix product types. and leviton is dirt cheap compared to molex. As time and money permit Ive been pulling two RG6 and 2-4 Cat5 and a 12/2 romex to each drop (im running 12/2 because one of the hardware stores mispriced the 250' rolls at the 25' roll price), this way there is always room for dedicated runs or running to a switch. Behind the primary TV becomes a network of its own these days now that everything seems to have network capability. I only use wireless for media if I have no other option, I detest wireless in the home for anything other than laptops and mobile devices On Mon, Nov 3, 2014 at 10:13 AM, Ken Hohhof via Af <[email protected]> wrote: > Most people don’t want a wired network anymore, even if their house is > wired, plus if you wanted to be forward looking you would run fiber and > maybe put 802.11ad in each room once it becomes mainstream. Except of > course you can’t do POE over fiber. > > People with houses wired for data typically have money, so I recommend a > wired router like an RB2011iL-IN in the basement and then wireless APs in > rooms as needed using the wiring in the walls. That avoids the hairpin > wiring issue. Or you could put a small wired router like a 750/950 series > in the basement plus a POE switch, that way the APs could be powered off > POE, and they could install other POE stuff like security cameras, VoIP > phones, etc. You could also put a central UPS in the basement, powering > the CPE radio and the router/switch, plus anything throughout the house > powered via POE would stay live in a power outage. Of course people with > money building a new house probably have a Generac on a pad outside > anyway. Still, it could be a nice package to sell people and make a little > extra money. > > > *From:* Jeremy via Af <[email protected]> > *Sent:* Monday, November 03, 2014 9:52 AM > *To:* [email protected] > *Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] Structured Cabling - Looking for Ideas > > The Leviton boxes are nice. Most newer homes use those. The problems > that I have seen with those boxes are these: If you want to install a > router and have some wired machines and some wireless you will need the > router to be located inside the metal box. This doesn't work very good for > wireless at all. Also, they rarely install power in the Leviton boxes so > no ability for POE or router to be there anyway. We usually end up tying > in to the wire to the eve, then splicing again to one of the rooms, then > placing the router in that room. This leaves you with no options for a > wired network as all four pair are used to get the POE to that room. If > they have two CAT-5E cables ran to the room they can use one back to the > Leviton box and then install a switch in the box (assuming again that you > have an AC outlet in the box. If the house is wired correctly the Leviton > boxes are nice but they are rarely setup correctly for fixed wireless. > > On Mon, Nov 3, 2014 at 8:45 AM, Rory McCann via Af <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Hi guys, >> >> I'm planning on rewiring my house this winter and was looking for ideas >> on structured wiring as well as products to use. I'm looking at simply RG6 >> coaxial and ethernet (for phone and data). >> >> The wiring will be run in a rather deep crawl space and would like >> something that can either mount to the floor joists or something where I >> could build out a mounting platform with 2x4s and install it that way. I'd >> like the wiring to be vertical so I can kneel and access things and not >> have to crank my head and look up. >> >> My original thought was to get a wall-mount "vertical" rack and mount it >> horizontal - this would effectively give me a 19" 6u rack to work with that >> would hang from the floor joists. I was then going to just get a couple of >> keystone patch panels and populate them with the various connectors by >> room. Doesn't need to be fancy. It would still leave me some room for a >> battery backup, rackmount switch and router/modem. >> >> After looking around a bit I also see that Leviton offers some structured >> solutions. These would have to be mounted between some 2x4s or something so >> that I could have normal access to it. Wondering if any of you have any >> experience with these or similar products and if they would be a better >> solution than my rack idea? >> >> Unfortunately, I do not have any room or areas upstairs for the wiring, >> so the crawlspace is where it's going to go. >> >> I'm not looking to spend a small fortune on this project - just want >> something to centralize, label and clean up my existing house wiring as >> well as give me some flexibility in the future. >> >> -- >> Rory McCann >> MKAP Technology Solutions >> Web: www.mkap.net >> >> > -- All parts should go together without forcing. You must remember that the parts you are reassembling were disassembled by you. Therefore, if you can't get them together again, there must be a reason. By all means, do not use a hammer. -- IBM maintenance manual, 1925
