Joined Oct 2004
Geek Chick
Forum Thread
How hard is running ethernet cable through your house?
March 30, 2011 at
04:27 PM
in
Desktop Computers
My router is in the basement. My desktop computer is in a 1st floor office. I've really love to run an ethernet cable there. How hard is that? Who would I hire to do this if I didn't want to do it myself? How much more work is it to run one to my living room also (also first floor, across the house from the office, though).
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I got a general sense of where the cable would be, cut out the hole in the wall, fished down some string with an alarm clock tied to it. When the alarm rang downstairs, I marked where I heard and cut there.
I got a general sense of where the cable would be, cut out the hole in the wall, fished down some string with an alarm clock tied to it. When the alarm rang downstairs, I marked where I heard and cut there.
Well, I'll give you points for originality! I can pretty much guarantee that not very many people would think of stuffing an alarm clock down a hole, and figuring out where the noise is coming from!
I guess your house didn't have any sole plates installed, to bolt the house to the foundation? One good breeze, and away she goes!
you are better off buying the ethernet wire and jacks yourself as most installers will up-charge on them. if you just need 2 or 3 then lowes is a good place, but if you need more, check out mon0price.
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ir remember one guy that wanted 2 outlets in each room, but he said that at any time only 1 outlet would be used. so i explained the pros and cons of using an ethernet splitter vs. just running a second line. also, told him that since he chose to just use an ethernet splitter inside of one of the jacks in each room, that if he wanted later on he could just add a switch at the main outlet in each room so that both outlets could be used at the same time. the bad thing is if he ever sells that house, and if the next person tries to plug in 2 devices in the same room, neither will work with just the ethernet splitter.
ir remember one guy that wanted 2 outlets in each room, but he said that at any time only 1 outlet would be used. so i explained the pros and cons of using an ethernet splitter vs. just running a second line. also, told him that since he chose to just use an ethernet splitter inside of one of the jacks in each room, that if he wanted later on he could just add a switch at the main outlet in each room so that both outlets could be used at the same time. the bad thing is if he ever sells that house, and if the next person tries to plug in 2 devices in the same room, neither will work with just the ethernet splitter.
on the flip side ive had to fix a couple of screwed up wiring jobs that looked like they were DIY or installed by an installer that didnt know what they were doing. one guy had enough ethernet crisscrossing his attic to wrap around his house 2 or 3 times.
on the flip side ive had to fix a couple of screwed up wiring jobs that looked like they were DIY or installed by an installer that didnt know what they were doing. one guy had enough ethernet crisscrossing his attic to wrap around his house 2 or 3 times.
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If wall is drywall, a mud ring is handy to secure the plate and/or jack.
As for pinout of the jack:
http://pinoutsguide.co