I don't know how you differentiate "cable" from "patch cords", but I ran dozens and dozens of 100' Cat 5 (not even Cat 5E) back in the early 2000s with no issues. Well, they were only running 100Mb back then.
cable that comes in such dispense methods as 1000' pull boxes is solid and has lower attenuation.
Patch cords are for connecting from the jacks to the host or from the patch panel jacks to the switches in the rack
Patch cords are more flexible than cable but have higher attenuation so not good for long runs.
Patch cords are not meant to be used as permanent wiring. Running patch cords inside the walls of buildings reeks of amature hack work.
Never seen Ethernet into a punch down block.
Don't punch down blocks require solid (not stranded) wire ? Most Cat5E and Cat6 is stranded (easier to use).
Youve never seen a patch panel with CAT5e or CAT6 ethernet wiring punched down to on a 110 block?
Most CAT5e and CAT6 is NOT stranded.
Ive never even seen a 1000' pull box of stranded cable at the supply house. Ive picked up 1000' boxes of cable by the pallet before too.
Where do you get your info?
Although I have pulled miles of Cat5 (prior to 1000BaseT) I have never used shielded. Maybe in the environment you mentioned (POE microwave radios) ...
I only use shielded CAT5e for radios that are susceptible to ESD and lightning outdoors as well as outdoor runs for cameras. The cameras dont need shielded cable but i dont want to stock multiple types of outdoor rated wire and the non shielded CMX stuff is often more expensive than Ubiquiti tough cable that i use.
You don't even need a pro to terminate fiber. Terminating and splicing fiber used to be a very high paying job. I think it still is if you are doing the undersea type cables. However, for normal building/patch fibers they make a little $15 kit with a jig to cut the fiber square and polish it up. Then you can terminate it or put another fiber in the jig and epoxy two together.
No not quite.
A clever costs hundreds of dollars. Mine Unicam clever costs $450 and the really fancy ones are close to a grand.
the "$15 kits" you're referring to are just the fiber connector kits and there is no "jig", whatever you think that may be. And they cost more than $15 each. I know because i just order some Leviton fast cams for a job (not my preferred brand; I like corning unicams). These kits do not include any such jig that would cleve/cut the fiber.
Also, nobody exposies and polishes fiber anymore. Its a waste of time and money.
The aforementioned connector kits come with pre-polished stubs of fiber epoxied into the connector. All one does is strip, clean, and insert the bare fiber strand into the connect and then release the holding tab or crimp the jacket depending on brand.
Not sure where you got your info but its not correct.
Everything I installed was in commercial, office environment. Much off it under raised floors, some inside walls and in ceilings.
The corporation paid for thousand of mile to be installed in the 90s/00s, all Cat5, stranded. (Two cables to each desk, plus a Cat3 for phone. Cat 3 has been abandoned for VOIP phones.) No punch down blocks. We were probably one of the first (non-computer) corporation to have Gbit fiber back bone, including between many buildings.
I know they started renting "dark" fiber from phone/cable companies over 10 years ago. Some of these runs go 10+ miles.
So the company wasted money on patch cords that cost way more than building cable? Would've been cheaper to buy cable in a 1000' pull box than futz around with patch cords.
If you didnt use punch blocks and patch panels, how did you terminate any of it? Did you just run it out of the wall and into the computer or straight into a rack mounted switch?
Thats total absolute hack work if you did


