[ale] Future-proofing a house for networking -- what to run?
Derek Atkins
derek at ihtfp.com
Mon Sep 11 10:35:08 EDT 2017
Hi Phil,
On Mon, September 11, 2017 10:03 am, Phil Turmel wrote:
> Hi Derek,
>
> I haven't had fully open studs to work with, but an unfinished basement
> and an attic will do if you are willing to play with flexible drill
> bits. I've put a fair number of circuits in my house.
Indeed. In this case there is going to be some major renovation and new
construction so I'll have generally easy access, I think. I probably wont
know for sure for a couple months.
> On 09/11/2017 09:33 AM, Derek Atkins wrote:
>> Hi Alers,
>>
>> If you had the ability to future-proof your house (imagine open studs,
>> so you could run anything you wanted), what would you run. Assume a max
>> of 6 cables per drop?
>
> I tend to run 2x LAN, one primary, one backup. Two RG6/quad-shield, one
> to attic for broadcast or dish duty, one to ground level nexus for cable
> company.
Note that I meant "per drop". In my current house I have 16 drops
throughout the house. I neglected to add that I also ran 2x RG6 to my
attic and also 2xRG6 + 1xCat6A to my exterior PoP (for cable, etc). I'm
less concerned about runs from nexus to attic -- I can run conduit for
THAT run. But it's to each of the drops that I'm trying to plan out.
Bedrooms, media rooms, offices, etc. Any place I might want to put a TV
or Computer.
> Future installs will include a DC power connector routed to my UPS so I
> can efficiently keep a few circuits alive even when the UPS is "off".
Hmm...
> For the entertainment center location, I added fiber for digital audio,
> two USB circuits, two HDMI circuits, and a headphone jack. All of these
> routed to the basement media server.
>
>> Last time I ran 4x Cat6A and 2x RG6. However I'm never using both RG6
>> F-connectors, so I figured I could replace that with something else.
>> And before you ask, yes, I *AM* using all 4 RJ45 connectors in some of
>> my drops (and in one place I wish I had MORE Rj45). So, what else
>> should I run?
>
> Consider learning to use VLANs so you don't have to waste so much
> infrastructure on additional LAN cables. Linux supports it out of the
> box and small VLAN capable switches are relatively cheap.
Yes, but then I have to power those switches with a UPS to keep them
alive. Also, in many cases (like in my office), my phone is on PoE which
means it needs its own drop. Honestly, a 1000' spool of Cat6A is only
$150. Sure, that's 3-4 mini routers, but I'd rather centralize my
switching/routing when possible. The multiple drops aren't for VLANS but
to minimize the switches I need throughout my house.
>> However I'm not sure what kind of "fiber" to run, nor what kind of
>> connector I should use.
>
> Digital audio has a standardized connector for AES and ADAT technologies.
Yes, but I wasn't necessarily thinking just digital audio -- I was
thinking digital data (of which audio is one type of data) -- hence my
questions here to determine the best general solution.
Thanks,
> Phil
-derek
--
Derek Atkins 617-623-3745
derek at ihtfp.com www.ihtfp.com
Computer and Internet Security Consultant
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