now thats an interesting proposition, running fiber through your house
instead of copper...

On Fri, Oct 24, 2008 at 11:22 AM, David R. Wilson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>
> On Fri, 2008-10-24 at 08:46 -0400, Andrew Farnsworth wrote:
> > Running Gigabit ethernet on Cat 5 does work, however, you will find
> > that many things affect the performance and you might want to keep
> > these in mind.
> >
> > 1) Run length - the length of cable your signal must traverse will
> > affect the performance.  The longer the cable the worse performance.
> > Keep your patch cables to the appropriate length, i.e. don't use a 50'
> > cable for a 3' gap.
> >
> > 2) Jack quality - Most jacks will cost about $5 for a keystone
> > category 5e jack.  As such, don't buy Cat5 jacks, splurge for the 5e
> > ones.  I have yet to see the house that has very many jacks (i.e. >
> > 100) so spending an extra $2 per jack won't cost you much.  Cat6 jacks
> > won't do you any better then Cat5e if you are still using Cat5 wire.
> >
> > 3) Interference - the main difference between Cat5 and Cat5e is the
> > number of twists per foot.  The more twists, the less susceptible to
> > interference.  As such, if your cable runs along next to the power
> > lines in your house, you may see a gigabit connection, but get very
> > bad throughput, even to the point of worse actual throughput than 100
> > Mbit due to noise on the line.  In a residence, this should be fairly
> > minimal as your noise generators are pretty much limited to your power
> > lines.
> >
> > 4) Wiring - Gigabit uses all 8 wires in the cable.  10/100 Mb only
> > requires wires 1,2,3, and 6.  Since you are doing the wiring yourself
> > you can be sure to attach all 8.  Find yourself a good wiring chart as
> > the pairing in gigabit cabling must be 1-2, 3-6, 4-5, 7-8.  Be sure
> > your patch cables are all Cat5e or better as this will insure they use
> > all 8 wires, though I have yet to find any premade patch cable in the
> > last 5 years that doesn't use all 8 wires, it is better to be safe
> > than sorry.
> >
> > 5) Network switch - don't buy the cheapest switch you can find.  In
> > fact it might be worth shelling out for a decent business class switch
> > that has network managment facilitites.  These will usually cost more
> > but will also give port statistics which will let you track down
> > issues.  Keep in mind that if you are pushing a lot of data around
> > your network from more than just your server, but peer to peer or if
> > you have multiple servers, that the internal bandwidth of the switch
> > you choose is important.  Many cheap Gigabit switches only support 2-3
> > Gb of internal bandwidth so if you have 4 machines talking to 4 other
> > machines you can saturate your switch.  Not usually an issue for home
> > networks, but something to keep in mind.
> >
> > To make a long story short, get it all wired up and test it out.  If
> > you have a specific run that you think is important to get full
> > gigabit speeds from, it might be worth re-running that wire using
> > Cat5e cable.
>
> Cat 5e is typically rated to 350mb.
>
> Make that Cat6 cable.
>
> Cat 6 is also a bit different in the structure of the cable.  Andy hit
> all of those points correctly.  Keep in mind that the twist just before
> hitting the jacks can make a difference.  Length of the cable at Gigabit
> speed makes a big difference.  If you do have to run a long length of
> cable and it needs high bandwidth switch to fiber.
>
> Dave
>
> >
> > Andy
> >
> > On Fri, Oct 24, 2008 at 8:12 AM, Steve <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >         As far as cabling is concerned, from my old research as I
> >         recall, cat5
> >         was designed for 100m, cat5e was designed for 1gb, and cat6
> >         was for
> >         1gb to 10gb. It's all about the wire gauge and # of twists.
> >         Those more
> >         twists are designed to stop interferences. I know you're not
> >         interested in re-pulling your old cable but if you start
> >         seeing poor
> >         speeds and dropped packets, that could very well be your
> >         issue.
> >
> >
> > >
>
>
> >
>

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