Without trying to stir up a debate on networking... I agree with everything
that has been mentioned here with one exception. You can run gigabit over
CAT5 cabling if it has been installed properly.

See
http://www.gigabit-ethernet.org/technology/whitepapers/gige_1098/copper.html
#base

I have a few clients that are enjoying it now. The biggest problem I see
that causes the most issues is cable installers back in the days of just
10/100 only wired pins 1,2,3 and 6. That was all 10/100 needed. So they
skipped the other wires in the cable. Gigabit Ethernet requires all 8 wires
to be connected.

So you could use CAT5e cabling, but if only 1,2,3 and 6 were connected you
would not achieve gigabit speeds. If the existing cabling was installed
properly and passes the specs for gig speeds there isn't a big need to
replace it. Unless there are other factors coming into play. 

Art

-----Original Message-----
From: Ben Scott [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, February 02, 2011 11:55 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Getting Rid of CAT5?

On Wed, Feb 2, 2011 at 10:40 AM, Holstrom, Don <[email protected]> wrote:
> I work in an old Museum here in the District. My runs are very long, 
> one is over 700 feet and gives me a problem every now and then. Is it 
> worthwhile to switch out our CAT4&5 and go to CAT6a (there is 
> something above 6a?)

  As everyone else has said, twisted pair Ethernet is limited to 100 meters
(~328 feet) in the spec.  This is independent of speed -- anything from
gigabit to ten megabit, CAT3 to CAT6A, the limit is 100 meters.

  Repeaters or switches along the way will let you extend that distance.
I'd suggest switches; that keeps the path full-duplex and you don't have to
worry about repeater hop limits.

  Fiber can go longer still.  How long depends on the type and grade of
fiber.  Exact numbers seem to vary by manufacturer.  HP (ProCurve) ranges
from 220 meters (721 feet) on the cheapest to 70 kilometers (43
miles) on the high end.  (http://tinyurl.com/4kdkoda)

  If you don't have existing modular ports (SFP) in your switches, you can
get single-port media converters for small money.  Installation is usually
the pricey part.

   I've read nothing good about Ethernet-over-power-lines.

 The grade of UTP mainly determines maximum speed:

CAT3 = 10 megabit
CAT5 = 100 megabit
CAT5E = 1 gigabit
CAT6 = waste of money
CAT6A = 10 gigabit

  The 100 meter limit comes about due to the time it takes for signal
propagation in a copper medium.  In the event of a collision detection, a
"jam signal" is transmitted.  There has to be enough time for the jam signal
to reach all other nodes before the next transmission opportunity.

  Since it's a timing limit, on a full duplex point-to-point link (i.e.,
most links these days), you can actually go a longer distance and still have
it sometimes sort-of work.  However, you're out-of-spec, so anything can
happen.  It might fail on alternating Tuesdays, or it might cause demons to
fly out of your nose.

-- Ben

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