DanielCoffey
Regular Contributor
Hello folks - I am in the fortunate position of having a new residential property wired for cat6 and am at the point of having to sort out what is needed in the "network cupboard". I have only ever used a standard 4-port router before so would appreciate some advice.
At the moment there will be 10 sockets around the property, mostly in pairs, all terminating in a bunch in a central cupboard with mains points adjacent. Also in the cupboard will be the principal telephone line and a space for my router.
I understand that the phone line will go straight to the provider's home hub (if it is any good, or a VDSL and separate router if it isn't) and then a single cable will go to one port on the switch. It is what happens next where I need some advice.
1. Do I need some form of patch panel between where the cables emerge and the switch itself or do I just plug straight into the switch? All cables will be labelled.
2. Is this a simple case of using an Unmanaged switch or is there a need for a Managed switch? It is a home installation with one NAS, one main PC, one secondary PC, two AppleTV units with associated TVs and a network printer. There are no consoles, no home office and no guest network.
3. Unless I have any PoE devices, I assume a non-PoE switch is preferred for power efficiency and reliability, yes? I have specifically asked the Architect if any of the home alarm, doorbell, thermostat or ASHP/MVHR control panels need PoE just in case.
Thanks in advance for any help and if there is something you think I may have not considered, please shout out now.
At the moment there will be 10 sockets around the property, mostly in pairs, all terminating in a bunch in a central cupboard with mains points adjacent. Also in the cupboard will be the principal telephone line and a space for my router.
I understand that the phone line will go straight to the provider's home hub (if it is any good, or a VDSL and separate router if it isn't) and then a single cable will go to one port on the switch. It is what happens next where I need some advice.
1. Do I need some form of patch panel between where the cables emerge and the switch itself or do I just plug straight into the switch? All cables will be labelled.
2. Is this a simple case of using an Unmanaged switch or is there a need for a Managed switch? It is a home installation with one NAS, one main PC, one secondary PC, two AppleTV units with associated TVs and a network printer. There are no consoles, no home office and no guest network.
3. Unless I have any PoE devices, I assume a non-PoE switch is preferred for power efficiency and reliability, yes? I have specifically asked the Architect if any of the home alarm, doorbell, thermostat or ASHP/MVHR control panels need PoE just in case.
Thanks in advance for any help and if there is something you think I may have not considered, please shout out now.