jeepnatv4life
Well-known member
Can cat 5 be ran in the same conduit as my electrical service without issues? I am currently stubbing in for my slab and was wondering
to share a conduit the wire must have the same voltage rating. service wire has a 600v rating, cat five has no voltage rating and can't share the same conduit. of course there is more to the issue but that is the simple answer.

Code wise, the CAT5e would need to be rated for the proper voltage and its not.
So u need a separate conduit....put in several so u have options. Easier to do it now.
I'm a big fan of always pulling a string along with any cable pull you make. Cheap, easy and you'll be grateful when the next technology comes along or "damn I should have thought of that!"and a string in both conduits for any future pulls.
if you want bleeding edge speed then use cat 6, otherwise either will do
If your talking actual cat 5 then your damn lucky. Been trying to talk the boss into getting one of our office areas rewired. A mix of cat 5 and 5e. The original cat 5 was put in around 98 or so. Some of those drops just flat ****. Several negotiate to 10 mb due to the amount of noise from all the electrical wiring. Fox and Hound are damned near useless from the 60 hz hum it's so bad.Cat 5 - cheap, good enough. We're running Gig speeds on desktops in buildings full of Cat5, some runs near the spec limit. Lots of it old, like 20 years. No issues.
so should I use CAT 5 cable or CAT 5 E???
If your talking actual cat 5 then your damn lucky. Been trying to talk the boss into getting one of our office areas rewired. A mix of cat 5 and 5e. The original cat 5 was put in around 98 or so. Some of those drops just flat ****. Several negotiate to 10 mb due to the amount of noise from all the electrical wiring. Fox and Hound are damned near useless from the 60 hz hum it's so bad.
As for the OPs question 5e or 6 would work.

Can cat 5 be ran in the same conduit as my electrical service without issues? I am currently stubbing in for my slab and was wondering
up the remote devices like some HUBS and routers. They powered it from the cable itself without using an extra power supply. Is it really possible?Hi, I am not a pioneer on this matter. One of my friends told me he had done a project using CAT 5. Using the unused pin in CAT 5 they poweredup the remote devices like some HUBS and routers. They powered it from the cable itself without using an extra power supply. Is it really possible?
a lot of commercial wireless access point are using Cat5 for both data and power. Like someone mentioned, it's called PoE .... extremely common today.Hi, I am not a pioneer on this matter. One of my friends told me he had done a project using CAT 5. Using the unused pin in CAT 5 they poweredup the remote devices like some HUBS and routers. They powered it from the cable itself without using an extra power supply. Is it really possible?
Cat5e because that's all they sell these day locally but also consider cat6. I only use cat6 these days because it's so cheap. You can get a roll of 500' of cat5e for $50 and cat6 for $80.so should I use CAT 5 cable or CAT 5 E???
Cat5e because that's all they sell these day locally but also consider cat6. I only use cat6 these days because it's so cheap. You can get a roll of 500' of cat5e for $50 and cat6 for $80.
you can do some research and plan your network system, then go on the board to ask a bunch of questions .... or can just take the guess work out of it and just get cat6. I had this dilemma recently but for $30 more .... it's no brainer to get cat6.
if your cat5 is shielded you should not have problem to run the electric cable and cat5 cable innproximity but you never run low voltage or communications cable with high voltage (110v and +) in the same conduct.
you should have took cat6 for maximum performance.
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^ This. There are some Cat5e, that is voltage rated. We use in MCC's, and other industrial applications. Rockwell bulletin 1585 stuff. You won't like the price, so run a separate conduit.![]()