Ryan Thompson
New Around Here
(Apologies in advance for the terminology which I'm sure is wrong in several places)
Hello, home network newbie here who needs some help (ok.. a lot of help). This is a bit long winded with several questions, so please bear with me.
A bit of background: I just moved into a new house. I'm getting 155mbps from my ISP, and currently have a DOCSIS 3.0 modem/router gateway (arris dg2470). It's connected to coax in a wall jack in my den, and I'm directly connecting a few devices to it via ethernet (PS4, apple TV, AV receiver). The rest of my devices throughout my home are connecting via wifi. However, wifi isn't strong throughout my house - I'm able to connect to the 2.4ghz network in every room, but not the 5ghz. My house has CAT5e jacks in every room, and I'd like to determine if / how it's worth getting these connected so that I can have hard wired connections in every room (as well as strong wifi throughout the house by connecting access points in other rooms), or if there are other alternatives that will help establish a performant network throughout my house.
As I said, I'm a newbie when it comes to networking, but I'm technically savvy (CS degree, professional software engineer) and I think I can get things set up with a bit of guidance. I have some general questions about if / how I should get started.
1) I gather that buying a wifi system / wifi extenders would be one option. At this point, could a wifi system be the path of least resistance? Am I going to a lot more bang for my buck by setting up hard wired connections, or can I fully utilize the bandwidth I'm getting from my ISP with wifi? I do have a media server running on my network that I use to stream to other devices in my house, so I'd also like this to work as well as possible. I'd also like to set up something that's upgradeable and could handle more bandwidth from my ISP down the line (maybe gigabit ethernet if / when it becomes available in my area)
2) In general, I need help understanding the state of affairs in my central patch panel / wiring layout throughout my house. I've attached a few pictures. Each of my rooms has at least one of those wall mounts with 2 coax jacks, a phone jack and an ethernet jack. From what I can tell, the phone jacks are wired up (to the green panel, a Leviton PWB 58141-02, which I understand is only for phone lines), but the ethernet jacks aren't connected to anything in the central control panel. Can anyone help confirm, or tell me what I'm looking at? I'm also curious about what's going on with the door answering system (which I gather is connected to the phone line), and about the wires which are connected in the picture with my hand in it. I don't really know what's going on here, or where / how to start untangling this.
3) How can I test the ethernet wall jacks to determine which cable (in the central panel) goes to which wall jack? Currently, the only tool I have is a crimper (and some CAT5e plugs), so I assume I'd need to buy a device to help me test signals.
4) I have two (potentially three) rooms where I want to connect some devices directly to ethernet, and I also want to have a strong wifi signal throughout my house. What layout of hardware would be best to accomplish this? I could be totally off here, but I'm thinking that I need a modem -> router -> switch at my central patch panel (all of my rooms' wall jacks would be connected to the switch). Then, in rooms where I want to connect multiple devices via ethernet, should I buy another router for that room, and connect the devices to it? I assume these routers would enable my hard wired connections as well as giving my wifi coverage throughout my house by acting as access points. With this type of layout, do I actually need a router at the central panel, or could I just put a modem / switch there?
5) Bonus question.. I don't know much about this "Doorbell Fon" door answering device, other than that it's not currently working (nothing happens when I press the buzzer outside). I assume that if I hook up a phone to one of my phone jacks, it will start ringing when I hit the buzzer, but I haven't been able to confirm this yet, since I don't have a phone. What I'd love to do is set something up where I get a phone call (on my cell phone) when someone hits the buzzer. Any idea how I could make this happen? Will I need to pay for a land line to make this work?
Thanks in advance to anyone that's willing to help! Please let me know if I can provide any more info / pictures to make questions easier to answer.
Hello, home network newbie here who needs some help (ok.. a lot of help). This is a bit long winded with several questions, so please bear with me.
A bit of background: I just moved into a new house. I'm getting 155mbps from my ISP, and currently have a DOCSIS 3.0 modem/router gateway (arris dg2470). It's connected to coax in a wall jack in my den, and I'm directly connecting a few devices to it via ethernet (PS4, apple TV, AV receiver). The rest of my devices throughout my home are connecting via wifi. However, wifi isn't strong throughout my house - I'm able to connect to the 2.4ghz network in every room, but not the 5ghz. My house has CAT5e jacks in every room, and I'd like to determine if / how it's worth getting these connected so that I can have hard wired connections in every room (as well as strong wifi throughout the house by connecting access points in other rooms), or if there are other alternatives that will help establish a performant network throughout my house.
As I said, I'm a newbie when it comes to networking, but I'm technically savvy (CS degree, professional software engineer) and I think I can get things set up with a bit of guidance. I have some general questions about if / how I should get started.
1) I gather that buying a wifi system / wifi extenders would be one option. At this point, could a wifi system be the path of least resistance? Am I going to a lot more bang for my buck by setting up hard wired connections, or can I fully utilize the bandwidth I'm getting from my ISP with wifi? I do have a media server running on my network that I use to stream to other devices in my house, so I'd also like this to work as well as possible. I'd also like to set up something that's upgradeable and could handle more bandwidth from my ISP down the line (maybe gigabit ethernet if / when it becomes available in my area)
2) In general, I need help understanding the state of affairs in my central patch panel / wiring layout throughout my house. I've attached a few pictures. Each of my rooms has at least one of those wall mounts with 2 coax jacks, a phone jack and an ethernet jack. From what I can tell, the phone jacks are wired up (to the green panel, a Leviton PWB 58141-02, which I understand is only for phone lines), but the ethernet jacks aren't connected to anything in the central control panel. Can anyone help confirm, or tell me what I'm looking at? I'm also curious about what's going on with the door answering system (which I gather is connected to the phone line), and about the wires which are connected in the picture with my hand in it. I don't really know what's going on here, or where / how to start untangling this.
3) How can I test the ethernet wall jacks to determine which cable (in the central panel) goes to which wall jack? Currently, the only tool I have is a crimper (and some CAT5e plugs), so I assume I'd need to buy a device to help me test signals.
4) I have two (potentially three) rooms where I want to connect some devices directly to ethernet, and I also want to have a strong wifi signal throughout my house. What layout of hardware would be best to accomplish this? I could be totally off here, but I'm thinking that I need a modem -> router -> switch at my central patch panel (all of my rooms' wall jacks would be connected to the switch). Then, in rooms where I want to connect multiple devices via ethernet, should I buy another router for that room, and connect the devices to it? I assume these routers would enable my hard wired connections as well as giving my wifi coverage throughout my house by acting as access points. With this type of layout, do I actually need a router at the central panel, or could I just put a modem / switch there?
5) Bonus question.. I don't know much about this "Doorbell Fon" door answering device, other than that it's not currently working (nothing happens when I press the buzzer outside). I assume that if I hook up a phone to one of my phone jacks, it will start ringing when I hit the buzzer, but I haven't been able to confirm this yet, since I don't have a phone. What I'd love to do is set something up where I get a phone call (on my cell phone) when someone hits the buzzer. Any idea how I could make this happen? Will I need to pay for a land line to make this work?
Thanks in advance to anyone that's willing to help! Please let me know if I can provide any more info / pictures to make questions easier to answer.