My company would blast me and rightly so if my cables looked like a sack of shit. When u visit a site and see shocking cabling u always take note of who the company was and when u see brilliant cabling u do the same. So many electrical companies used to get the sparkies to do the structured cabling and it turned out terrible.
@@shamelessape1 It looks brilliant but there's yes and no... All the cables are the same color - so what's the difference how are they "organized"? Only way of finding the right one is by blinking led-s on the switch. And here comes the hard part. What if entire cable needs to be replaced (broken somewhere mid-way, not at the rj plug)?
@@madyogi6164 He's referring to organization as it relates to neatness. The cables on the back of these patch panels are organized into bundles defined by the left or right side of the panel they go to, then sub-divided based on row, and finally split into groups of 2-3 ports. You really want to be able to visually trace wires to and from the back of the patch panel--tugging on them to find the right cable is a good way to pull a wire loose.
Great job to the team that did this. Hope your management team recommended a bonus for you. This is beyond just doing your job. It’s passion and love for what you do. I absolutely love people who go above and beyond. Thank you for doing an amazing job.
Nice to see pride in someone's work. I used to work for Southwest Communications back in the '90s and that's how our work would look. If you were sloppy, you would be out of a job quickly.
Brings back fond memories to when I was a wireman at GEC. We had to make them neat like this and all wires were "formed" at terminal blocks too. Didnt use cable ties, all had to knotted with binding.
I've seen a LOT of great cable work and done a fair amount myself, but I have never seen anything this good. You sir are an artist. I suspect your OCD therapy bills must be outrageous.
Thirty odd yrs back when commercial phone systems were still heavily "wired out" like this, we used to do work like that. Cabling is an Art. Absolutely fantastic work by whoever did this.
Blitz K Well, copper is not as bad as people think. We have a 10Gb copper network at work, and it is great. Your cable broke? Well, use this CAT5e, no 10Gb for a while, but it works.
The radius bends when the cables come out of the bundle and into the patch panel are a thing of beauty! This is what a fantastic job looks like. I know some people will say "but zip ties!" but truthfully in a DC core you shouldn't be screwing around with your cable layout. Plus, the likelihood of having a cable fail in this sort of setup is vanishingly small.
I've done cable management this way many many times but I have also done cable management using wax string = the old telephone company way = as requested by the customer.. Either way looks nice but zip ties are by far easier and faster.
To everyone saying, "It's going to be a really crappy job replacing a cable." A quality ethernet cable, which data centers use, have a VERY LOW failure rate. They are just as reliable as the electric cables run throughout a building. So, in reality it's a RARE occurrence and in the 50-60 years when they do begin to experience widespread failures(and that is just a possibility they could last for hundreds of years). The entire server room would be have been overhauled, multiple times, with new servers and technologies, including cabling, anyways. So basically everyone's point, who said that, is MOOT.
+Philip Horsley Exactly. I have been doing data center infrastructure for 10 years and can count on one hand the number of cables that have "gone bad". (Though sysadmins will go there first every damn time). And that is for patch cords. This is punched down trunking which, once tested after install, should NEVER have a problem.
rats eat cables, random contractors can cut cables, there might be a cable drop that needs to be relocated that does not have enough slack....lots of things go wrong
Joshua - in my experience a datacentre with rats probably wouldn't have neat cabling anyway; or many customers. And besides, this is infrastructure cabling, it's so rare to ever have to touch it once installed. Even if a fault develops on a port all you'd do is patch to the next spare.
And they probably already have some redundant drops in there. I mean, even in small offices it's a good idea to run every drop in pairs... Cable is cheap
Just remove the plug, thread the cable through the clamps and thread in a new one then add a plug. And it likely wont brake because its not being bent at a stressfull angle AND its easier to find it and remove it than doing it from a spaghetti explosion kind of situation.
I used to do this in Data Centres, very time consuming and not that easy but rewarding being told your work is very good and seeing it neat and on display. Now cable sock is the way forward as it saves bags of time, which no one gets on jobs these days....excellent work👍🏼
Wow!! What an amazing installation. One of the best ones I've ever seen. Only problem with it is that it should be secured with Velcro and not tie wraps.
I'm sure the front and the network drop cover plate has a label. You really don't need to label cables. It's a lot of extra work for little benefit. There are tools that will allow 2 techs to walk through the building identifying port numbers as they go and label on the fly -and you don't have to dress your cabling based on any particular order.
+hellterminator Like the copper is suddenly going to "go bad"??? That's about as "never going to move" as it gets. And none of it looks over tightened. I'd rather see cable lacing, but that's such a lost art.
That is awesome! Not allot of people can relate or appreciate something like this until you have actually worked on it. This looks machine strung! I wish our racks were this tight. Awesome video 👍🤓
Cabeamento do meu grid. ehmfpw.blu.livefilestore.com/y2pWFW203gypFVgGBoI_e7YpSLo3VPyGwQrP_URYBAk5FSN26jno0fXIQ4rbQS3jlNLXG2KSMxnYV1g43SHA9_ZVnHNnBW4Dp1HkZtvwzxbURA/WP_000712.jpg
This is an excellent job my only comment is to stop using tie wraps. its OK to use them to train your cables but shouldn't be used long term. one small diagonal clip and its a razor blade. Most if not all central offices ban the use of tie wraps (fire+safety hazard). I used a lot of wax twine but now Velcro seems to be what all the "data" people use nowadays, so I too secede to the Velcro.
Hats of to the team for this masterpiece! I'am a data center technician myself, I've never seen such an organized and precise dressing as this. My only question is, did you cut the ends when you reached the rack to get the exactly needed lenght?? It looks like its prefect down until the last centimeters, my mind is blown tbh...
And then the vice president of eliminating extra personnel stated, "cables going to the left side must be a different color from those going to the right side".
he aint a poor sod .. he did it the right way ... the poor sod is the guy who has to take the jumble and make it work ... that takes forever this setup 1 day for all the wires to be tested .. a jumble a week IF youre lucky
This is nothing short of stunning work. I have to say, that if you DID have to replace a cable, it would be WAY easier to do it in a nice neat situation, than a rat's nest. Are those 10 gig cables? they look too big to be cat 5 or 6. You my friend have amazing talent, patience, and pride. THIS is what pride in your work is all about. I'm awe struck. This is going in my favorites folder. *applause* *standing ovation* Take a bow my friend, and then another.
While a rat's nest is unsightly and a nightmare to unravel, this can also be a nightmare to unravel as well if a cable did go faulty or some slack was needed for whatever reason - and a time-consuming nightmare to reclose too. Aesthetics isn't the only important parameter.
you only get that service when you being paid well..........been there done it. Bosess always want to know whats taking so long. Thats when zero f^^cks are given. you give them spaghetti for rushing you........Obviously this guy had no worries of time.
And this is the main reason I never got back into the industry. I had a string of jobs where neatness was demanded so I was ruined for the typical rush jobs that are more commonplace. I got so frustrated for over 2 years not being able to do work that met my own high standards I was soured on the network tech/cabling industry.
i always told the people who said rush ... you want it done or done right pick on ... cuz getting it done can be 20 minutes but if you got to trouble shoot it after it will be days to get it done .... if you do it right the first time trouble shooting takes hours at most...and that includes putting the fix back in place with all the ties ... . most sites who are given th option say take your time do it right cuz the IT departmnt understands ... less time down means more time up and more productivity ... IT's groups that say get it done aint worth shit.
Where do you want me to post my work Quinn Greg??Because my work is perfection, I'm BICSI Level 2 Certified by the way,and there's no tie wraps aloud in my data center!Not on Cat.6 especially, so let's see some of your work Quinn Greg.
+Tony Touma ..... I know a well done job will be velcroed and labeled. the client didn't want to get this done all the way because of many important reasons.... I can't say the details because It would involve the company's way of doing things.......... I guess you sir are gonna have to imagine how it would look with velcroe and labels.
+Eddy Rodriguez You're right,and I will admit it does look aesthetically good,really good,but no tie wraps in the data center is a rule of thumb on my side of things.
+Quin Gregg Congrats bro,I'm on LinkedIn, check me out.My real name is Tony Touma. I like your credentials though,started in 84' myself. Enjoy the weekend.
My company just moved to new offices. We have a large test lab, requiring lots of RF/Ethernet connections. In total we have 34 racks dedicated to just to patch panels, albeit not entirely full, to support about 120 racks of various equipment we installed afterwards. They did great work. The work in this video is even better. Must give props to the technicians that spend weeks doing such work. It isn't outwardly appreciated enough, but it serves as a critical service to network infrastructure.
Very nice dressing. I used to do this. Spend weeks in the closet 8-10 hrs a day wasting tons of ty-wraps. Wished I had taken photos of my work back then.
Not patch cables, but the actual wiring. That's an excellent point though. When it comes to cables ties, I consider "less is more"...the less you use the better. It's been suggested to me that you should use Velcro for CAT6. To that I say "then why do the come with the panels???". ;-)
patch cables LOL , seriously though if a cable gets added that is a lot of zip ties to cut and re-install. Velcro is your answer Eddy . I'm sure in the last 7 years you've figured this out though .
Lmfao not even close a union guy wouldn't have this much time or pride. Plus it's really not that hard considering they have a tool that slides over the cable straightening it out for them and then they wrap a cable tie on it
velcro is the worst thing to use as a cable tie on this .. it adds an emf which makes everything go screwy ... NEVER use velcro on network cabling EVER
Cut a zip tie, pull the bad cable out, put a new one in its place, and zip it up again. Then proceed to the next zip tie. When bundles are made perfectly like these, they actually make it very easy to replace a cable, as they don't get tangled. So you can just pull out the bad cable instead of having to untangle it.
@@sanderd17 But if the cable is in the middle of the loom - not so easy, and not so easy to get it as good looking again. Re-tying it will take ages too. Nice and aesthetic yes, but that's not the be-all-and-end-all.
I do this for a living. I have to say, hands down nicest I have ever seen. Wish I could get it that perfect. Only change I would make is some cable identification labels would be nice.
would have been interesting to see the process that led to the outcome. curious if the bundling was random, i.e. a single level in a punchdown came all from the same floor in the highrise, or from a random office? also, maybe the nearly empty punchdowns should have been filled from the bottom up so you could add more lines later and maintain the symmetry and overal OCD/anal retentiveness :) Great job, nicely done!
I thought porn was banned on TH-cam? ;p
CyberiusT ikr
So true
Great work
So did I... I guess "datacenter porn" doesn't count ;-)
hhhhhhhhhhhh
This video is so good even the URL ends in "Yes"
+Jaryth000 "FY1XB0rrYes". FY1=fyi, XB0rr=xbox?, Yes=YES
+ILIKECATZNCHEEZBURGERZWITHCHEEZSHAYAYAYAYAYAYAYAYAYAYAYAICOULDGOONLIKETHIS4EVERBUTIHAZTOGONOWBYE lol yesss
th-cam.com/video/FY1XB0rrYes/w-d-xo.html
Yes.
th-cam.com/video/FY1XB0rrYes/w-d-xo.html
yes
There are still some people who give a shit. Nice work.
My company would blast me and rightly so if my cables looked like a sack of shit. When u visit a site and see shocking cabling u always take note of who the company was and when u see brilliant cabling u do the same. So many electrical companies used to get the sparkies to do the structured cabling and it turned out terrible.
This is a contractor who does this fulltime
@Josh Q when was this? Sounds chaotic!
maybe it's for airflow
Problem is most techs don't get paid for maintenance work smh
these cables are more organized than my life
I think they are more organized than anybodys life...
Lol I wanted to say that!
Lol
@@Andi-ft5rt PREACH !!!!😁
R/suicidebywords
"Hey boss, wanna take a look at this? I'm done."
"Yeah, it looks good but, it took you all week. You're fired."
"uno-reverse card. Your are fired, i have the "go ahead" of upper management."
I don't think you would get fired, I s important to keep this shit organised like this
@@shamelessape1 It looks brilliant but there's yes and no... All the cables are the same color - so what's the difference how are they "organized"? Only way of finding the right one is by blinking led-s on the switch. And here comes the hard part. What if entire cable needs to be replaced (broken somewhere mid-way, not at the rj plug)?
@@madyogi6164 He's referring to organization as it relates to neatness. The cables on the back of these patch panels are organized into bundles defined by the left or right side of the panel they go to, then sub-divided based on row, and finally split into groups of 2-3 ports. You really want to be able to visually trace wires to and from the back of the patch panel--tugging on them to find the right cable is a good way to pull a wire loose.
@@shamelessape1 Not sure what the cable count in each bundle is but I believe BICSI says not more that 62-64?
Great job to the team that did this. Hope your management team recommended a bonus for you. This is beyond just doing your job. It’s passion and love for what you do. I absolutely love people who go above and beyond. Thank you for doing an amazing job.
I’m a data cable engineer myself, but that is just beyond anything I’ve seen, great work
Hats off to the planning and the patience of the installation folks.
Awesome !!
Bang on comment! The planning is incredible.
It's amazing how exact and linear a cable comb will make an installation look like fine art.
For the longest time I wouldn't believe it, and then I saw the fields with my own eyes.
I should have watched this alone with candles. This is some sexy cabling.
I'm actually crying, its just sheer perfection, I can't take it!
Even the zip ties are aligned and symmetrical. Pure bliss
In a few years when computers have gone way beyond what we've got now this should be kept in a museum.
This isn't going anywhere for a long time lol
I've wired electrical panels years. Ones work is like their signature.
That's art, in a sense.
The german word for art used to mean 'technology', too 😎
I never thought I'd say this about wires but..."Nice Rack".....
hahahha ya
this is absolutely beautiful
so much care... so much time..
Nice to see pride in someone's work. I used to work for Southwest Communications back in the '90s and that's how our work would look. If you were sloppy, you would be out of a job quickly.
Brings back fond memories to when I was a wireman at GEC. We had to make them neat like this and all wires were "formed" at terminal blocks too. Didnt use cable ties, all had to knotted with binding.
Network Administrator: I'm going to need some cable ties for this project as well.
Company: Sure, how many should we order?
Admin: Yes.
ALL :)
All of them.
I've seen a LOT of great cable work and done a fair amount myself, but I have never seen anything this good. You sir are an artist. I suspect your OCD therapy bills must be outrageous.
😂😂😂
Supervisor: "I want each and everyone of those zip ties cut and replaced with velcro, your BICSI re-certification class starts Monday"
That's seriously what happens lol
Zip ties make no difference at all on performance compared to velcro.
@@Nick.Ashton Tell that to the Supervisor
@@AndreTheGiantDuran DM me his number and I will lol
@@AndreTheGiantDuran why do we need to use velcro on cat 6?
Thirty odd yrs back when commercial phone systems were still heavily "wired out" like this, we used to do work like that. Cabling is an Art. Absolutely fantastic work by whoever did this.
Whoever ran those lines and prettied them up like that is the king of cabling and has a lot of patience. My boss would never touch it.
That must feel so satisfying for the person/people who did that
it's even better when you are te one who as to trouble shoot line faults ... takes 1/3rd the time and replacing bad lines is easy as pie and tie
@@0623kaboom and then that guy replaced it with a unmatched colour cable
Hes name is eddie....cat6 eddie
Pul5ar persons
@@pierreuntel1970 that wouldn’t happen in a data center like this.
that has got to be the tidiest job EVER on a data centre!!
The OCD is strong with this one
I can't find words to comment ! Wonderful paintings. Thank you very much for your realization.
I have been doing this for close to 30 years and I am stunned. Excellent work.
Rip it all out... we're going to fiber!
I really was looking for this comment. If you use so much copper... i bet fiber is less expensive.
and fragile
Nimisidiv we are hanging off the shit are we?!
Herman Willems Less expensive cables, but usually more work and more expensive electronics... So in the end it is usually not worth it, yet!
Blitz K Well, copper is not as bad as people think. We have a 10Gb copper network at work, and it is great. Your cable broke? Well, use this CAT5e, no 10Gb for a while, but it works.
Thanks, now I'm even more ashamed of the cables behind my computer
ME TOO!
Local Area Connection: "Network Cable Unplugged"
Realizing we forgot to label them...
Burn it all and start over
@@whatthetroll9347 u dont always need to label it often times sure does help
but if its documented well enough u can figure it out
The radius bends when the cables come out of the bundle and into the patch panel are a thing of beauty!
This is what a fantastic job looks like.
I know some people will say "but zip ties!" but truthfully in a DC core you shouldn't be screwing around with your cable layout.
Plus, the likelihood of having a cable fail in this sort of setup is vanishingly small.
"You don't know the power of the zip tie"
-Darth Vader
I've done cable management this way many many times but I have also done cable management using wax string = the old telephone company way = as requested by the customer.. Either way looks nice but zip ties are by far easier and faster.
To everyone saying, "It's going to be a really crappy job replacing a cable." A quality ethernet cable, which data centers use, have a VERY LOW failure rate. They are just as reliable as the electric cables run throughout a building. So, in reality it's a RARE occurrence and in the 50-60 years when they do begin to experience widespread failures(and that is just a possibility they could last for hundreds of years). The entire server room would be have been overhauled, multiple times, with new servers and technologies, including cabling, anyways. So basically everyone's point, who said that, is MOOT.
+Philip Horsley Exactly. I have been doing data center infrastructure for 10 years and can count on one hand the number of cables that have "gone bad". (Though sysadmins will go there first every damn time). And that is for patch cords. This is punched down trunking which, once tested after install, should NEVER have a problem.
rats eat cables, random contractors can cut cables, there might be a cable drop that needs to be relocated that does not have enough slack....lots of things go wrong
Joshua - in my experience a datacentre with rats probably wouldn't have neat cabling anyway; or many customers. And besides, this is infrastructure cabling, it's so rare to ever have to touch it once installed. Even if a fault develops on a port all you'd do is patch to the next spare.
It's surprisingly easy to replace individual cables in a properly dressed loom such as these.
And they probably already have some redundant drops in there. I mean, even in small offices it's a good idea to run every drop in pairs... Cable is cheap
If one of these cables breaks he's gonna be there all month undoing all those zipties
Just remove the plug, thread the cable through the clamps and thread in a new one then add a plug. And it likely wont brake because its not being bent at a stressfull angle AND its easier to find it and remove it than doing it from a spaghetti explosion kind of situation.
one of the most satisfying video I've ever seen by now
I used to do this in Data Centres, very time consuming and not that easy but rewarding being told your work is very good and seeing it neat and on display.
Now cable sock is the way forward as it saves bags of time, which no one gets on jobs these days....excellent work👍🏼
Wow! That's very professional. This deserves an award and a pay raise. Best damn wiring job I've ever seen.
I watched the full 2 minutes. Twice.
someone deserves a prize for this
Wow!! What an amazing installation. One of the best ones I've ever seen. Only problem with it is that it should be secured with Velcro and not tie wraps.
Scott Bevan I knew that was you! Exactly what I said :)
NEVER USE VELCRO .. you add an emf to the cables which will fry your network boards ... like it was the 4th of july ... always plastic or cordage
@@0623kaboom velcro is plastic, though. 🤔
@@0623kaboom Not sure how EMF has anything to do with Velcro. Maybe you're referring to ESD?
Outstanding work!
Very relaxing to look at.
Some data center manager will be proud to show off their datacenter!
Fantastic work! Its nice to see such attention to detail. Even like the sound of the chiller...Very soothing.
No Labels? No Numbers? very nice work and job security.
yep
+John Spinale
No need if you have the beeping tool.
+dsalpha18 lol beeping tool.
I am pretty sure who ever did that has plenty of job security.
I'm sure the front and the network drop cover plate has a label. You really don't need to label cables. It's a lot of extra work for little benefit. There are tools that will allow 2 techs to walk through the building identifying port numbers as they go and label on the fly -and you don't have to dress your cabling based on any particular order.
My OCD is so calm right now
mine too...this is seductive.
They should be Velcro’s. Zip ties cut cables
And when you need to replace a cable...
Lovely though!!
Seriously though, how the hell you change the cable out without shit loads of extra time on your hands?
Now they want Velcro instead of Zip Ties A cable comb , patience And Pride in your work is all you need
That my friend is a thing of beauty. Wish more people cared about things around them as you do.
That my friend is a work of ART I wonder if all that was.done by one person and what the heck is that place amazing
I believe this is called "pride in work well done".
Catastic! Love it. Strange to say I got get joy out of seeing the great cabling. This is rare
Broh, wana be proud of yourself and do this to the home computer hahahahahahaha? :P
Eleanor Ward I already have! Foh fook sake!
Brian Collins Yeah, it's wonderful, isn't it. It's literally art!
"takes sip of beer" yeah i could do that.
fails at managing 10 cables
How lovely to see quality workmanship. It is rare, thank you for sharing.
That isn't just dressing and termination.. that is freaking art. I can't even fathom how much effort it took to do that.
This is where the matrix was born
Actually this is where it ends........
Eddy Rodriguez lol, i stand corrected.
Nice color coding, that will make maintenance easy.
"Which one is it?"
"The light blue one."
Someone isn’t an electrician
Beautiful.
Now hope you don't ever have to replace a cable because if you do, you'll spend 10 hours and $50 in zip ties replacing it.
omg now that u mention it
+hellterminator the horror!!
+hellterminator Like the copper is suddenly going to "go bad"??? That's about as "never going to move" as it gets. And none of it looks over tightened. I'd rather see cable lacing, but that's such a lost art.
jfbeam More like someone clumsy is going to damage the cable.
+hellterminator
:D
Or just unplug both ends and use a new one.
Whoever plummed this should get a Nobel Prize! I'm a zip tie junkie but I could never make it that pretty!
That is awesome! Not allot of people can relate or appreciate something like this until you have actually worked on it. This looks machine strung! I wish our racks were this tight. Awesome video 👍🤓
I just cant stop hitting que replay button!
Networking porn
O. Salviano olha só o TOC do aniran!
meu cabeamento aqui é menor que esse ai, quase tudo é por fibra.... eu tenho dois troncos desses no Mainframe, com fibra
=x
Cabeamento do meu grid.
ehmfpw.blu.livefilestore.com/y2pWFW203gypFVgGBoI_e7YpSLo3VPyGwQrP_URYBAk5FSN26jno0fXIQ4rbQS3jlNLXG2KSMxnYV1g43SHA9_ZVnHNnBW4Dp1HkZtvwzxbURA/WP_000712.jpg
This webpage is not available
This satisfies my OCD. A lot.
This is an excellent job my only comment is to stop using tie wraps. its OK to use them to train your cables but shouldn't be used long term. one small diagonal clip and its a razor blade. Most if not all central offices ban the use of tie wraps (fire+safety hazard). I used a lot of wax twine but now Velcro seems to be what all the "data" people use nowadays, so I too secede to the Velcro.
Velcro is also a lot less of a waste if one wire goes bad
This is art, it deserves to be placed in a museum (at least an image of it)
That is some serious punch down!!! Magnificent work!!!
How much you gonna need the cable ties?
The dudes who did this: *yes*
Makes no sense.
Hats of to the team for this masterpiece! I'am a data center technician myself, I've never seen such an organized and precise dressing as this. My only question is, did you cut the ends when you reached the rack to get the exactly needed lenght?? It looks like its prefect down until the last centimeters, my mind is blown tbh...
And then the vice president of eliminating extra personnel stated, "cables going to the left side must be a different color from those going to the right side".
Which left side ? Your left or my left ? :-)
This is absolutely insane, this is the best cable management I’ve ever seen in my life
Superb and professional work! Work of people who's work speaks for it self.
Backbone of the Matrix
Punch downs too?
I feel for the poor sod who installed that system.
There's enough Cat6 there to maintain the structural integrity of the building in an earthquake / demolition!
he aint a poor sod .. he did it the right way ... the poor sod is the guy who has to take the jumble and make it work ... that takes forever this setup 1 day for all the wires to be tested .. a jumble a week IF youre lucky
This is nothing short of stunning work.
I have to say, that if you DID have to replace a cable, it would be WAY easier to do it in a nice neat situation, than a rat's nest.
Are those 10 gig cables? they look too big to be cat 5 or 6.
You my friend have amazing talent, patience, and pride.
THIS is what pride in your work is all about.
I'm awe struck.
This is going in my favorites folder.
*applause*
*standing ovation*
Take a bow my friend, and then another.
Yes those are ten gig cables
While a rat's nest is unsightly and a nightmare to unravel, this can also be a nightmare to unravel as well if a cable did go faulty or some slack was needed for whatever reason - and a time-consuming nightmare to reclose too. Aesthetics isn't the only important parameter.
wow I can feel all the hours of painstaking combing, zip-tying and crimping at just the right length just by looking
I hope who ever had this done for them appreciates the shit out of that workmanship. Those tails are beautifully installed!
the OCD in me is dancing with joy
Imagine having to remove one cable
you only get that service when you being paid well..........been there done it. Bosess always want to know whats taking so long. Thats when zero f^^cks are given. you give them spaghetti for rushing you........Obviously this guy had no worries of time.
And this is the main reason I never got back into the industry. I had a string of jobs where neatness was demanded so I was ruined for the typical rush jobs that are more commonplace. I got so frustrated for over 2 years not being able to do work that met my own high standards I was soured on the network tech/cabling industry.
i always told the people who said rush ... you want it done or done right pick on ... cuz getting it done can be 20 minutes but if you got to trouble shoot it after it will be days to get it done .... if you do it right the first time trouble shooting takes hours at most...and that includes putting the fix back in place with all the ties ...
.
most sites who are given th option say take your time do it right cuz the IT departmnt understands ... less time down means more time up and more productivity ... IT's groups that say get it done aint worth shit.
What a magnificent job, wow, an eye for details, amazing.
Absolutely incredible... but what happens when one of the cables in the back (at the top) goes bad and needs to be changed 👀
Now who's got an OCD there??
Great job, but i prefer 1" velcro ties.
nursing a semi right now
I'm spent by 1:49
Where do you want me to post my work Quinn Greg??Because my work is perfection, I'm BICSI Level 2 Certified by the way,and there's no tie wraps aloud in my data center!Not on Cat.6 especially, so let's see some of your work Quinn Greg.
Now replace all those tie wraps with velcro and we're talking!
+Tony Touma ..... I know a well done job will be velcroed and labeled. the client didn't want to get this done all the way because of many important reasons.... I can't say the details because It would involve the company's way of doing things.......... I guess you sir are gonna have to imagine how it would look with velcroe and labels.
+Eddy Rodriguez You're right,and I will admit it does look aesthetically good,really good,but no tie wraps in the data center is a rule of thumb on my side of things.
Yes sir sometimes we need to make the client happy .....
+Quin Gregg Congrats bro,I'm on LinkedIn, check me out.My real name is Tony Touma. I like your credentials though,started in 84' myself. Enjoy the weekend.
My company just moved to new offices. We have a large test lab, requiring lots of RF/Ethernet connections. In total we have 34 racks dedicated to just to patch panels, albeit not entirely full, to support about 120 racks of various equipment we installed afterwards. They did great work. The work in this video is even better. Must give props to the technicians that spend weeks doing such work. It isn't outwardly appreciated enough, but it serves as a critical service to network infrastructure.
Very nice dressing. I used to do this. Spend weeks in the closet 8-10 hrs a day wasting tons of ty-wraps. Wished I had taken photos of my work back then.
God forbid one of those patch cables goes bad...you'll need bout 3 bags of tie-wraps to make it "look" good again....not very service friendly.
Not patch cables, but the actual wiring. That's an excellent point though. When it comes to cables ties, I consider "less is more"...the less you use the better. It's been suggested to me that you should use Velcro for CAT6. To that I say "then why do the come with the panels???". ;-)
Not patch cables. Idiot.
patch cables LOL , seriously though if a cable gets added that is a lot of zip ties to cut and re-install. Velcro is your answer Eddy . I'm sure in the last 7 years you've figured this out though .
Just imagine something wrong with one of those wires you have to cut all the zap straps
Very easy to cut and replace though.. The cables build up a memory and pretty much remain in place.
Agreed; Top notch. Looks like Union work.
Lmfao not even close a union guy wouldn't have this much time or pride.
Plus it's really not that hard considering they have a tool that slides over the cable straightening it out for them and then they wrap a cable tie on it
Now that is art. Getting them all organised and straight without a kink to be seen (or measured I hope) great work.
That is pure talent, beautiful to look at!
That is a lot of zip-ties, some velcro would be nice.
+Luis Baez I like what you wrote. Velcro is the way. zip ties distort cables.
Luis Baez right, zip ties is taboo . unless it's a service call and just needs to work for a period of time. then f it.
Luis knos de wai
velcro is the worst thing to use as a cable tie on this .. it adds an emf which makes everything go screwy ... NEVER use velcro on network cabling EVER
holy shit if I used zip-ties my boss would make me re-do all that, but I wouldn't ;)
good luck changing the cable in the middle of the strand that went bad
Cut a zip tie, pull the bad cable out, put a new one in its place, and zip it up again. Then proceed to the next zip tie. When bundles are made perfectly like these, they actually make it very easy to replace a cable, as they don't get tangled. So you can just pull out the bad cable instead of having to untangle it.
@@sanderd17 But if the cable is in the middle of the loom - not so easy, and not so easy to get it as good looking again. Re-tying it will take ages too. Nice and aesthetic yes, but that's not the be-all-and-end-all.
I thought zip tie is not a good practice, not really sure why but everyone is moving to velcro as a standard. Easier for repairs.
I do this for a living. I have to say, hands down nicest I have ever seen. Wish I could get it that perfect. Only change I would make is some cable identification labels would be nice.
This is pure art,absolutely beautiful!!
Amazing but velcrow would be better
I came
would have been interesting to see the process that led to the outcome.
curious if the bundling was random, i.e. a single level in a punchdown came all from the same floor in the highrise, or from a random office?
also, maybe the nearly empty punchdowns should have been filled from the bottom up so you could add more lines later and maintain the symmetry and overal OCD/anal retentiveness :)
Great job, nicely done!
This is so neatly organized that i think a few of my braincells melted.
This makes my ocd feel so good. I would love to hire this company to do my hospitals wiring.