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).
56 Comments
Your comment cannot be blank.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Most wall jacks have markings or instructions as to where to put each wire.
For a more visual explanation:
http://www.9thtee.com/networkingts.ht
Go with keystone jacks - they may be a tad more expensive but are fully configurable and very easy to install - most will come with a little punchdown tool, and I've never seen one that wasn't color coded for both the A and B standards.
100 feet: http://www.monoprice.c
75 feet: http://www.monoprice.c
Plus every other length you would need...
The standard way is to use a jack at each end to terminate the cable on, mount the jack in a faceplate and then use a patch cord from the faceplate/jack to your device.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
You do have to be careful about pulling the cable and not damaging the ends if you do it that way, yet if you are drilling say one hole in the floor it would be pretty easy. Years ago I used the premade cables, now I buy the cable and put the RJ45's on myself. Once you get the hang of it, it's pretty easy.
a low power outlet + plate is not hard to do, and looks infinitely better than an oversized hole in the wall followed by a coupling.
You also start with one room and work your way around the building in a clock wise manner as well...you can continue the counts from the last room (say 1-4 were in there) with outlet #5 in the next room...or designate rooms with numbers, then jack numbers...so room 1 Jacks 1-4, Room 2 Jacks 1-6, Room 3 1-2, etc...or 1-4, 5-10, 11-12 and so on....So when those cables are terminated on the panel they should be in the same order...makes trouble shooting and maintenance a lot easier.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.