Originally posted by: amdskip
There is a networking forumAnyways, drill hole, shove wire through, thats about it. Just don't kink/pinch the wire.![]()
Originally posted by: KingNothing
What my friend did on his new house (admittedly he ran the cable before the drywall went up) was to run the CAT5 into the same box that the phone cable was in. After the contractors finish building the house all he has to do is remove the phone plates, replace them with plates that have phone and CAT5 connections, and wire up both cables. You'd never know that wasn't the way it was originally.
Originally posted by: Vampirrella
I dont understand why anyone would use the old hardwire methode when setting up a wireless network is much more efficient? Who still wants to be making holes in the walls etc when you can run "invisible" cable anywhere?
Originally posted by: glen
Originally posted by: Vampirrella
I dont understand why anyone would use the old hardwire methode when setting up a wireless network is much more efficient? Who still wants to be making holes in the walls etc when you can run "invisible" cable anywhere?
Is a hardwired network faster?
Originally posted by: Vampirrella
I dont understand why anyone would use the old hardwire methode when setting up a wireless network is much more efficient? Who still wants to be making holes in the walls etc when you can run "invisible" cable anywhere?
Originally posted by: Vampirrella
I dont understand why anyone would use the old hardwire methode when setting up a wireless network is much more efficient? Who still wants to be making holes in the walls etc when you can run "invisible" cable anywhere?
Originally posted by: Vampirrella
I dont understand why anyone would use the old hardwire methode when setting up a wireless network is much more efficient? Who still wants to be making holes in the walls etc when you can run "invisible" cable anywhere?
Originally posted by: glen
Wow, I am learning some stuff here.
I am just going to the room next to mine, so I need 2 face plates and then connect them between ( inside the walls).
So, do they have premade 12" long cat5e terminated on both ends in keystone jacks?
Cheaper and easier for me to buy a criping tool and make them myself?Originally posted by: rpbri2886
Originally posted by: glen
Wow, I am learning some stuff here.
I am just going to the room next to mine, so I need 2 face plates and then connect them between ( inside the walls).
So, do they have premade 12" long cat5e terminated on both ends in keystone jacks?
crim them yourself, easier and cheaper.
Originally posted by: MaxDepth
A .22 creates a nice small hole.