I have 1,000ft of Cat5e plenum cable given to me by an electrician I worked with this summer. My father would like to use it in his home.
The problems more or less are the house size, extending wireless access, and Comcast's existing equipment. I know what hardware I will need for the wiring installation (i.e. keystones, patch panel, switch) but I am looking for advice on how to manage these problems.
Here's a quick overview of the house and projected runs/drops:
Three floors (including finished basement) at about 4,100 sq ft.. Basement finished with tile ceiling at 14ft high (double foundation) with easy access to builder's 3" PVC conduit that runs from basement to attic for future additions (god bless him!). Also houses electrical/boiler room. Comcast service has Motorola SBV5220 cable modem, though it's only used for Comcast phone service (?). They have a 2-way splitter before this modem, the other cable goes to a powered splitter w/ runs through the house for TV. This floor would only need 2 runs of ethernet.
First floor has kitchen, living, dining, office, family rooms. The office is where they currently have a cable modem and Linksys WRT310n v2. Would have 2 drops of 2 runs each to family and office rooms
Second floor has 4 bedrooms, each of which I would suggest 2 runs to my father. Therefore 8 runs.
So we have 16 runs to 8 rooms on all three floors, check. But what about the wireless? It's my understanding that the wireless router needs to be placed between the modem and switch for managing IP addresses, DHCP, etc. Obviously their wireless router signal cannot reach the 2nd floor from the basement. How can I get wireless to the 2nd floor when it barely reaches already? Bridge/Repeater/Access Point?
And I may have to ask Comcast, but would we need both cable modems anymore? If one can handle the phone and internet services, could we use that by itself and mount a wireless router next to it on the same panel with the circuit breaker, etc?
Apologize for the long post, just like to keep it to one thread. Thanks for reading, and if there is any necessary information I neglected to add let me know.
Justin
The problems more or less are the house size, extending wireless access, and Comcast's existing equipment. I know what hardware I will need for the wiring installation (i.e. keystones, patch panel, switch) but I am looking for advice on how to manage these problems.
Here's a quick overview of the house and projected runs/drops:
Three floors (including finished basement) at about 4,100 sq ft.. Basement finished with tile ceiling at 14ft high (double foundation) with easy access to builder's 3" PVC conduit that runs from basement to attic for future additions (god bless him!). Also houses electrical/boiler room. Comcast service has Motorola SBV5220 cable modem, though it's only used for Comcast phone service (?). They have a 2-way splitter before this modem, the other cable goes to a powered splitter w/ runs through the house for TV. This floor would only need 2 runs of ethernet.
First floor has kitchen, living, dining, office, family rooms. The office is where they currently have a cable modem and Linksys WRT310n v2. Would have 2 drops of 2 runs each to family and office rooms
Second floor has 4 bedrooms, each of which I would suggest 2 runs to my father. Therefore 8 runs.
So we have 16 runs to 8 rooms on all three floors, check. But what about the wireless? It's my understanding that the wireless router needs to be placed between the modem and switch for managing IP addresses, DHCP, etc. Obviously their wireless router signal cannot reach the 2nd floor from the basement. How can I get wireless to the 2nd floor when it barely reaches already? Bridge/Repeater/Access Point?
And I may have to ask Comcast, but would we need both cable modems anymore? If one can handle the phone and internet services, could we use that by itself and mount a wireless router next to it on the same panel with the circuit breaker, etc?
Apologize for the long post, just like to keep it to one thread. Thanks for reading, and if there is any necessary information I neglected to add let me know.
Justin