- Feb 17, 2014
- 4
- 0
- 0
While this may have been asked and answered already Id like to verify my understanding with your assistance. I debated putting it in Highly Technical but decided it really wasnt that.
My home was wired with Cat5e cable apparently intended to support telephone service primarily. The Network Interface Device is located outside the house. The homerun of cables from the main floor of this single-story home is located in the basement. A schematic of the connections is attached.
or http://imgur.com/ODMWcl4
The Cox ISP feed comes to a ZOOM 5350 combo cable modem / router which has four ports. All are currently used so Ill need a switch with sufficient ports to handle the remaining circuits and future expansion. Will there be any trick to adding a switch to the 5350 to get additional ports?
The homerun Cat5e cables are terminated at RJ11 plates. The home ends of these cables are hanging loose in the basement since we never installed a landline phone (as the installer apparently assumed we would do).
My plan based on what Ive read in the sticky and other resources on and off this site is to:
(a) properly clean up the loose ends of the unattached Cat5es into a 110 block or patchpanel. (You dont have a separate block and patch panel. You just terminate cables into the patch panel, right? The number of panel ports, switch ports and cables is 1:1:1, correct?
(b) Dont make (crimp) any patch cables.
(c) re-wire the RJ11 terminations with R45 keystones.
As for the daisy-chained situations, consider the MasterBR and Family Room are approximately 1M (3ft) apart. For the MasterBR-Family Room trunk, my options as I see them are:
(1) add a switch in the MasterBR to feed the Family Room and the bedroom
(2) patch the MasterBR keystone to the Family Room keystone located in the MasterBedroom assuming I dont need service to the MasterBR. Can this work at all? If something else is needed by way of amplification or otherwise, what do you suggest? or
(3) homerun another cable to the Family Room if I want service to both locations.
Thank you for your help!
My home was wired with Cat5e cable apparently intended to support telephone service primarily. The Network Interface Device is located outside the house. The homerun of cables from the main floor of this single-story home is located in the basement. A schematic of the connections is attached.
The Cox ISP feed comes to a ZOOM 5350 combo cable modem / router which has four ports. All are currently used so Ill need a switch with sufficient ports to handle the remaining circuits and future expansion. Will there be any trick to adding a switch to the 5350 to get additional ports?
The homerun Cat5e cables are terminated at RJ11 plates. The home ends of these cables are hanging loose in the basement since we never installed a landline phone (as the installer apparently assumed we would do).
My plan based on what Ive read in the sticky and other resources on and off this site is to:
(a) properly clean up the loose ends of the unattached Cat5es into a 110 block or patchpanel. (You dont have a separate block and patch panel. You just terminate cables into the patch panel, right? The number of panel ports, switch ports and cables is 1:1:1, correct?
(b) Dont make (crimp) any patch cables.
(c) re-wire the RJ11 terminations with R45 keystones.
As for the daisy-chained situations, consider the MasterBR and Family Room are approximately 1M (3ft) apart. For the MasterBR-Family Room trunk, my options as I see them are:
(1) add a switch in the MasterBR to feed the Family Room and the bedroom
(2) patch the MasterBR keystone to the Family Room keystone located in the MasterBedroom assuming I dont need service to the MasterBR. Can this work at all? If something else is needed by way of amplification or otherwise, what do you suggest? or
(3) homerun another cable to the Family Room if I want service to both locations.
Thank you for your help!
