Looks like your on your way. Psst use a level when you draw / cut the hole! You might be able to pull ring back out and shave the plaster a bit so the ring can sit straight.
That really is a closet. Do you have power in there?
oh it will be level, it's not screwed in or anything yet. the metal bracket behind it is level though.
unless you are talking about the 'completed' outlet, which is actually level but kind of doesn't look that way in the pic.
there is an outlet that is right outside the door so i plan to just run an extension plug into the closet and plug everything in there.
however, what i did not realize until this morning when i went into the room, that the power going to the outlet i planned on using is turned on/off based on the light switch for the room as well. so i'm either going to have to figure out how to cut the relationship between the light switch and the outlet so that the outlet always gets power, or i'm going to have to use another outlet that is on the other side of the closet, which is not ideal by any means.
i had no clue about this because i had been in that room working with the light on the whole time, and this morning i went to check the weather on my pc and it had no connection and then i noticed everything.
Yeah the completed triple gang looks off. It if is level then good and that is an interesting camera effect.
IE: pull the switch out of the wall. Normally there is one set of wires coming in that are live all the time. One of the wires (typically black) will connect to the switch and the typically white wire will be wire capped to other white wires. You may get lucky and from that box you may see 2 other sets of wires, one going to the outlet and the other to switch. Simply unscrew the black wire for the set that goes to the outlet and attach it to the other side (the other screw) of the switch. This would liven the outlet all the time.
yea it is level, however the metal brackets that i have behind the wall plate seem to be a little crappy and it is hard for me to get them 100% secure. i didn't use any screws to hold the wall plate in, only the metal folding part. i did hear you can screw them in with drywall screws which will make them more secure. and i think this not being very secure is making the wall plates not very tight to the wall.
additionally i think the monoprice wall plates are just kind of cheap. they all seem to not be flush with the wall, partially because of the wires behind it pushing on them. i do plan on adjusting them all though when i'm done, so there is little or no pressure on the back of the panels. i left a lot of excess wire at every outlet and pushed it back in the wall, and i need to go back in the attic and pull it up into the attic so the slack is up in the attic instead of up in the wall.
as far as the outlet/light switch, i was talking to my buddy who is an electrician and he told me how to do it and it seems fairly simple to do. i'd like to just use the outlet right outside the closet as it would just be easiest that way.
that is the basic idea my electrician buddy told me i would have to do.
I prefer the plastic ones with the arms that screw tight myself.
yea i may end up having to get some new ones if i can't get these in there tight enough. will be a PITA to get the keystones out of the wall plates to put through the new brackets though heh.
so once you get the bracket extremely tight, the actual wall plate should not move at all right?
the thing is i have 2 of my brackets in there very snug/tight, but the wall plate still is not flat against the wall because the wire pushing it out a little bit at one side. but i think that goes back to the cheapness of monoprices wall plates.
Are you talking about the single gang low voltage box in your wall that you are installing? Make sure you get "old work" boxes at Home Depot/Lowes. Those are the ones that have the plastic "wings" on them that tighten to the back side of the drywall as you screw them in. Once that box is secure, your faceplate will not move.
yea i just picked up a few at lowes today, along with a mini screw driver set because mine was messed up, and you are correct, they should fit pretty close. the inside hole on the plastic ones is smaller, and i assumed that was the cutout size. but then i saw on the back that the actual piece that goes in is bigger than the hole in the middle, and there are the 4 little circles at corners that let you know where to drill holes.
so i'm pretty sure they are very similar as far as fitment goes.
in my basement i plan to have 3-4 wall plates fairly close together, for the network/coax cables. do you know what the closest distance you can put wall plates together, that won't effect the actual drywall at all to the point that they won't be too close to maybe just break the drywall if I screw them too tight? (if that even makes sense?)
basically what is the closest that you can put the underlying wall brackets without having any issues with the stability/integrity of the drywall between the brackets.
also wondering if you CAN use solid cat5e cable to make your own patch cables.
i have a lot left over and i have a lot of ends as well, and it would be nice to make wires the exact size i need for less clutter, and it won't cost me anything and i won't have to wait for any wires. i already have the crimper too.
wow so yea, those things OWN the metal brackets. they hold the plates in there really solid.
now i'm wondering if i cut a bracket hole where the top is 8.5" off the ground, if that is too low. the whole idea is to have the bracket totally hidden by my tv stand. anyone know if there is any structural integrity issues with that? i wouldn't think so since it's just drywall, and it's not supporting anything. because it would put the bottom of the hole about 4" off the ground or so.
also wondering if you CAN use solid cat5e cable to make your own patch cables.
i have a lot left over and i have a lot of ends as well, and it would be nice to make wires the exact size i need for less clutter, and it won't cost me anything and i won't have to wait for any wires. i already have the crimper too.
"you can" and "you should" are very different. Yes you can make them. You should not. First time you have an issue, the first step would be: Pitch the home made patch cable and spend the $2 to get a machine made. To quote Spidey: "Don't f**k with the physical layer"