I just looked over my daughter's new house a brand new track house. The house was wired with CAT5e cable. All the new neighborhoods cabled by AT&T are with fiber which is a good thing. The problem is the CAT5e cable in my daughter's house is installed for copper phones terminated with RJ11 jacks and all strung to an outside point where an AT&T phone box goes. There is no copper in new neighborhoods. The phone company will not put a box over it so it will need to be dealt with.
So now I need to modify the new cable. It looks like all the cable passes over a utility room going outside. The utility room has a high shelf a couple of feet down which would make a good network shelf. So the plan is cut the CAT5e cables in the attic and use a punch down panel. The idea is to run 7 patch cables down through the sheet rock roof to the shelf. This will be the distribution point for all the jacks in the house. All the RJ11 jacks need to be replaced with RJ45 jacks. Wireless will be handled by one or two wireless APs. To be determined.
My daughter wants to run a fax machine. I guess if she gets a VOIP line we can connect the back of the modem VOIP line to a RJ45 plug to feed her a fax line and phone.
Can you think of anything I missed or should add?
So now I need to modify the new cable. It looks like all the cable passes over a utility room going outside. The utility room has a high shelf a couple of feet down which would make a good network shelf. So the plan is cut the CAT5e cables in the attic and use a punch down panel. The idea is to run 7 patch cables down through the sheet rock roof to the shelf. This will be the distribution point for all the jacks in the house. All the RJ11 jacks need to be replaced with RJ45 jacks. Wireless will be handled by one or two wireless APs. To be determined.
My daughter wants to run a fax machine. I guess if she gets a VOIP line we can connect the back of the modem VOIP line to a RJ45 plug to feed her a fax line and phone.
Can you think of anything I missed or should add?