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Cat5e jack options

CooperS7777

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Apr 14, 2010
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Lakes Region, NH
Im looking for some help regarding Cat5e wall jack options. This isnt really strictly garage related, but this was the best place I knew of to turn for advice!

During the process of renovating our basement and attached garage, I am centralizing my AV and network equipment. Everything will be going in a wheeled rack which will live under the basement stairs.

I have run Cat5e from all the locations Id like it (older house with no existing runs), and dropped them through the wall and under the stairs. As of right now I have 18 runs that will be terminating under here, and will be feeding a 24 port gigabit PoE switch.

Is there an easy way to terminate these into a clean, wall mounted solution? Right now I'm looking at Leviton quick port jacks in a 3 gang box with (3), 6 port decora fittings. Is there such a thing as a ~18 port (or more) wall box? My though process in terminating them like this is that labeling will be easier (at least in my head), and I can adjust the length of the jumpers to allow the whole cabinet to roll out from under the stairs for service/upgrades etc down the road.

What do folks generally do? Should I just terminate to RJ45 connectors directly from the in wall wire?

Thanks in advance,

Coop
 
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Ilikeike

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Northern Ca.
I used a cat5 termination block when I wired our new office at work. It's hard wired on the back with jacks on the front,then I use small jumpers to various things like a switch,wifi,weather station receiver ,camera DVR,SCADA antenna set up...that are all located in the I T room.
 

jasonz

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Sep 15, 2015
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I think those are the exact ones I installed, the one for phones
and a couple of the cat5 strips. About the same sized piece of plywood also lol.


Yeah the one on the left is called a 110 punch down block. I couldn't tell you how many of these I've punched on....
 
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CooperS7777

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Lakes Region, NH
Awesome, thank you guys so much! A wall mounted patch panel looks like it will be much easier to deal with than trying to stuff all of those into a 3 gang box with decora covers; exactly what I was hoping for.
 

wssix99

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Chicago, IL
Awesome, thank you guys so much! A wall mounted patch panel looks like it will be much easier to deal with than trying to stuff all of those into a 3 gang box with decora covers; exactly what I was hoping for.

That's what you are asking for, but!!!

If you just put RJ45 jacks on the end of your CAT5/6 cables coming out of the wall under your stairs, you'll have less loss and better signal quality. If you are only going to use those lines for internet, I think that is the best way to go - it will also save you a little bit of money.

I wired my house with a Monoprice patch panel, but I am using my CAT5/6 wires for phone, internet, sensor signals, security, etc. So, I will change the use of the lines from time-to-time and the patch panel is handy for that.


If you are already considering mounting this to the wall, why not just use a wall mounted server bracket, get a mountable router/switch and then mount that to the wall? You can bypass the whole wheeled rack thing and it would make the wires with RJ45 terminations easier to manage. http://www.monoprice.com/Category?c_id=105&cp_id=10516
 
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CooperS7777

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Apr 14, 2010
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Location
Lakes Region, NH
The Cat5 drops are mostly for use other than internet. The modem and router will be in this same cabinet, one of the drops will used to feed a Ruckus WAP, two others will feed a driving simulator and X-Box, but aside that they will not be used for internet. A couple drops will be used for A/V over Cat5, specifically in the basement and garage, and the remainder will be part of a Savant automation system or spares for future expansion.

The space the cabinet will occupy is the lower 1/2 of the stairs, so it will be a smaller (~20u) cabinet. It will house the network switch, router, modem, zone director, multi zone amp and the Savant controller. Without the ability to wheel it out from under the stair case, I think it would be very difficult to work on the system. At 6'2" Im already uncomfortable working with the in wall wiring under there!
 

wssix99

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Mar 2, 2011
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Chicago, IL
Perfect. That patch panel is what you want, then. If you invest in a good punch down tool, you'll be glad you did. (Monoprice has some reasonably priced ones and youtube has some great tutorials.)

I've become a great fan of the wall mounted brackets over the standard racks. Some have hinges so you can access the wires behind them easily and I'd think that you could mount a few smaller ones creatively behind stairs in a way to save the floor space.
 
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