The contractor asked me how I want things wired and I didn’t really know.

I was thinking Cat6 ethernet cable with a wall plate in each room. They would all run to the crawl space where I’d have my modem and NAS.

It’s a small house. Only 5 ethernet wall plates throughout.

Is there anything I should ask for? I use Plex and IPTV.

Thanks.

  • Haelios_505@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    If he’s terminating each end too and has the equipment get him to test and certify each cable for you. Means you know they were working before he left. Proper labeling of each end is also essential.

    Never run a single cable when it’s just as easy to run 2 or more at the same time. Gives redundancy and/or expansion.

  • diwhychuck@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I would run drops to each corner of your house. One to your door bell. One to your garage. Also run a smurf tube to your outside of the house to your location of the drops.

  • HugsNotDrugs_@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I would also run OM4 fiber to your drops. Fiber is cheap, small and can already support 100gbit.

    If you want futureproof throw in some OM4.

  • HankHippoppopalous@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    2 cables in each. If they’re not terminating them, make sure they leave lots of slack.

    Why 2 cables? Because you never know. Cable is Cheap. Holes are expensive.

  • letsgotime@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    ethernet is cheap and easy while the walls are open. Go for 4 drops in each room. A drop behind any TV locations. Drops in the ceiling to put in access points. Where ever you want POE phones, add more drops in those location. Add a few more for POE cameras.

  • ghostinshell000@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Run cat 6 or 6a everywhere possible and run coax rg6 to where you need tvs or cable modems.

    At least on plate in every room with two cat and one coax.

    A couple plates placed high for WiFi access points

    Areas that might have office or other gear have two plates (4 jacks)

    Upgrade power jacks to include usb c charge ports, 30wtt where possible

    Put network panel in house in a closet

    • SamirD@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      This, plus do 2x coax drops per location. Basically as many coax as your have ethernet. The uses of that wire keep expanding. Some pre-terminated fibre would be nice too as it’s pretty cheap these days.

  • JBDragon1@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I normally recommend 2 runs per location minimum. If one fails for whatever reason, like a mouse chewing on a cable, you have a backup.

    Running Ethernet to my garage was a big plus also!!! I would like to run Ethernet out for a Doorbell, but that isn’t going to be easy with my house. Ethernet for Smart Doorbells is a growing thing.

    PoE Security cameras. You might want some in the future. Running Ethernet for that NOW would be easier than later. You leave a bundle of wire at each area you thing you need a camera and it all goes down the the basement.

    How about Speaker wires for a surround sound setup? Maybe Whole Home audio? These are some things to think about with new construction. Ethernet for TV Locations!!! Wired is always better then Wifi.

    With your Modem downstairs, how about Wifi Access Points mounted on your ceiling? So you can have great Wifi everywhere you go. This would really help if you want to get into some smart home stuff.

  • IbEBaNgInG@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Cat 6 everywhere, if you have a furniture diagram all the better - no sense putting in a jack on the other side of the room where your desk will be. Figure out where your furniture will go to and run at least 1 jack there, most of the cost is labor so I’d run 2 jacks to each room, just like outlets, (almost).

  • SP3NGL3R@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I recently finished my basement (~150sq.m. / 1500sq.ft.), I’m nerdy so be prepared. I bought a 300m spool of CAT6a, and ran about 13 drops.

    I ran (myself) network to about every other power outlet, 1 stud away from the power. And one to my ceiling (central) for a WiFi access point. This is hands down the most important one for me. Super clean looking and powerful WiFi. I also included power and network in 3 closets (never know where I’ll want my NAS) and to the outside corners directly into weather resistant junction boxes so no wire is exposed (cameras). Each of the 3 rooms got 2 (opposing corners), the kitchen, all along the main room wall, and to a built in bookshelf that has become my TV cabinet (receiver/amp + Nvidia Shield feeding to a projector in the main room).

    I did not bother with 2 runs everywhere because switches are just too easy and/or WiFi. Heck a basic switch can even be powered over POE so minimal wiring needed. And everything runs back to a “structured media cabinet” housing my fiber-ONT (so I had the ISP move my fiber here), router, switches, and network patch panels for the whole house. Ask the electrician (a low voltage kind) to “terminate to an Ethernet patch panel” so it’s easier for you to use. Also demand that they do NOT staple the wires, and test each for at minimum perfect 1 gigabit performance, probably 10Gb at these ranges.

    • SamirD@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      Most electricians still do not know how to terminate in 2023–and this is after seeing what type of garbage work they did in 1995 at my parent’s home–NOTHING has changed in nearly 30 years. I would have them run the wiring and do my own termination. Use the money saved on termination to double up on wires in case one is damaged when being run.

      • SP3NGL3R@alien.topB
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        1 year ago

        That is pretty surprising isn’t it? I do feel it’s more complex than power wires, but not by much. And to be fair I’ve rewired a few ceiling fan/lights in my day or 2-switch light controls and the wording on those instructions makes ZERO sense. “be sure to attach the hot wire to the hot terminal on the fixture” … but the fixture has zero indicators to which side is hot/cold and is symmetric to the drawing. However, one plate is copper and the other is silver (in color), so there IS a difference but what is it? stupid engineers. Don’t say “hot/cold” or “+/-” for a device that can only be identified as “silver/copper”. :p

        • SamirD@alien.topB
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          1 year ago

          It’s just more precise work to do it right. Idiot working upstairs at my parent’s house untwisted 3" before terminating jacks. And that’s why those jacks only get 100Mbs. I’m going to have to re-terminate all of them, and have been saying that for nearly 30 years now! Thank God they didn’t terminate all the jacks so I’ve got a shot at doing those right. The ones that were terminated correctly will iperf 700-900Mbs, so that’s pretty good considering there was no gigabit standard when the wire was installed and was the only 400Mhz rated wire on the market that cost us 2x as much, but was a great investment. If 2.5Gb/5Gb runs over it, that will be pretty awesome. We put 2x ethernet and 2x coax in each room and still have areas that were underserved. 2x of each on each wall and ceiling is the only way to go.

  • DogTownR@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Maybe do two drops per wall plate. Ethernet crushed WiFi performance so it’s nice to have wherever you want it.

    • SeafoodSampler@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      Two drops per plate. Shouldn’t cost more except for the extra cable. Buy it yourself if you have to.

    • BunnehZnipr@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      Also two is smart just for redundancy. Even if you only need one, if Jimmy puts a ringshank through one cable you’re still good!

      • SamirD@alien.topB
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        1 year ago

        You mean Jose or Jesus…I haven’t seen a white dude at a residential construction site in almost a decade now (sad to say)…

  • Whipitreelgud@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Done this. The drywall people or someone put a nail in the longest, most difficult cat wire run. Caught it too late - I lived two States away during construction. Would have had to pull three rooms’ drywall down to find it. Don’t let this happen to you.