Excellent work there. Many respects for your efforts in sharing this with us. Pulling cables will always be the best way to provide fast secure internet to users.
Jim: Even though this video was created 4 years ago, it is right on the mark and very, well done. Having been in the telco business for 45+ years your recommendations and suggestions are what I learned, practice and live by. Respect for the co-crafts is a plus acknowledging their fine work and practices. Confidentiality points gain high marks for good customer respect, and relations. You are so correct stating it is the customers place to make any announcements. I highly recommend this video for someone new and entering this craft field. Well done!
We used the cable identifier in a small 50 cable install in our new warehouse and it worked like a dream. Easy peasy the way I like it! Thanks for inventing it Jim!
Very nice install and great advice/tips. One thing towards the end 51:40--I would never let a tech punch down a jack using a customer's wall. If you miss or slip while terminating, your tools can mark up the surface (or even put a hole in the drywall) around the wall plate. I carry a small piece of 1x4 and use that behind the keystone's when punching down. Thanks for the videos you guys rock!
Check your local code. Every time you breach a fire wall you will need a fire prof (metal) box. If it is not a fire wall you do not need a metal box for low voltage. Thanks for watching ! Please subscribe !! It will make my day!
Thank you, I've started out in IT with laying cat5 / fibre cables back in 1996 - after that never did cabling again in a fulltime/professional manner. this brought a good refresh for me, many things have improved...!
"But remember, if you're a professional, keep it neat!" - way more companies should live up to this! I'm always upset, if companies leave a mess, or do sloppy work because 'you won't see it anyways afterwards'... Really good video!
Thank you for the uploading it helped me a lot as im a new comer for the network feild and i did a lot of mistakes but now i think i can save time and do a neat job at the same time thanks again mr gibson
Wow! Didn't know about that cable identifier with the LEDs and power supply! Certainly a huge time saver when it's time to figure out which jack is what.
In my state (Georgia), it is a code violation to run cable on top of ceiling tile, because the weight can compromise the grid. Technically, all cables have to be on their own independent support system, such as j-hooks, however sometimes that's impossible to do in buildings where cables have been ran differently in years past. We always install J-hooks on new construction. When we're working in post-construction work spaces, we run the cable above air duct and away from sprinkler/water pipes. Running cable on sprinkler pipes is a BIG no-no in my state.
If you have concerns about the weight of the cable bringing down the ceiling then you have other issues. Running cable on existing air ducts is far worse.
Jim - Great video! Lots of good information. I installed cable for many years and we always labeled the cables as we ran the cable and I love the idea of not having to label the cable to save time. However, I am now an IT Manager of a medium sized office (240 drops) and I actually like having the cables labeled in order for better troubleshooting. When a certain section of numbers is down it makes it easier to determine the cause. Is it the switch?, or did someone cut a section of cable?, etc. I would much rather spend the time to label the cables from the beginning when the time does not matter as much. When you have network outages is when the real time matters. Just a thought.
you do need to identify cables before patching to patch panel for cleanliness when plugging into switch. also when corporate has a standard place for each cable on the install guide.
Wow, in Sweden we pretty much put everything in 20 mm or 50 mm PVC pipes. It's required in many places, also sometimes Halogen free. Seems so easy to do it the "throw across the ceiling way"... Although I do professional fire alarms, burglar alarms, networks, video cameras etc...
Thanks a million Jim. Hey I have a question. When you hooked up two RJ11's with two pair from the same cable. You attached the blue pair in one jack and the orange pair in the second jack So you only put two wires in each of the RJ11 jacks. Which positions on the jack did you connect the blue wires and which positions on the jack did you attach the orange wires?
The blue on the jack is the middle 2 pins Most digital phone systems and regular phone lines or POTS lines use the middle pins . Conductors 4 and 5 in the middle
Hi Jim, I love your videos & I want to thank you for taking the time to share with everyone. I do have 1 question though, y are you still cabling with CAT 5 and not CAT 6?
I understand what you mean about time efficiency with the not noting on install the locations but when you have something like that 4gang plate, doesn't it look unprofessional having non sequential ports? So rather than 4,5,6,7 having 10,3,8,15? I LOVE the LED idea! Do you go back and do a full 8 light cable check later?
Every job I've ever been on the cables had to be in order. What extra cables are added after the job doesn't matter. Depends on the customer. I think it looks better when they're in order. But, to each their own.
cybererik1 You're right, it's really up to the customer. The biggest issues is when you're doing hundreds of jacks, it can take a half hour or more to just find the cable that's numbered. The more cables you have, the more complex it becomes, and the harder it is to do a clean cut. Most of Jim's customers do not care whether they are in order on the floor, but rather that they are in order on the patch panel, and clearly labeled on the face plate. But, you are right - everyone has a different way of doing it!
***** It really doesn't matter - it's all up to the customer. However, if a customer requests that we go in order and it's more than 10-15 outlets, we have to add additional labor for the install. In the last 25 years, we have installed over 6000 installations throughout the country, and very few of them have been installed in a clockwise or counterclockwise order. The larger the installation, the longer it takes per cable to install in order. The LED cable identifier has saved us hundreds of hours and has helped us pass on the savings to our customers. One last thing - the LED identifier is not meant to test the proper pin-out, it is only meant to ID a particular cable.
Its a pity your website doesnt supply to the UK as would love that cable identifier combo kit - even noticed its now available on amazon.com but i still cant order it from there either 🙁
Your are mazing people, I don't have to come over to USA for a training, well thanks a lot, of cause Who els can I buy the stuff from. This is Benny from Australia.
hey Jim, I want to startup a network service biz, I was wondering if you could advise how much or how to charge for the cabling service? and also how to marketing network cabling service and where to find the job? thanks very much for your insightful video, i also thing of buying tools and supply from your online store. thanks
A lot of people are conflicted on running cable like this because all the problems that might be. So when they do figure out the cost might be higher then what they originally quoted for. So my question is Do you quote something per drop and leave a little something in there just incase of problems on that drop or is it better to a quote for the whole job including the drops and other things? That is something i always wonder what would be the best way to deal with something like that.
That push pole looks pretty nifty, I'm an electrician and usually use a 10ft piece of 3/4 or 1/2" pvc with the bell end cut off. I do a lot of service work in stores and offices running new lines for receptacles and whatnot and MC or BX cable in a dropped ceiling can be a pain in the arse. Would that telescoping push pole work with a single 12/2 armored cable?
JimFPV yes it would work just tape it on the back end . It's one of the best tools you can have you'll find more uses once you have one . On the end is a hook you can telescope the gopher pole out and hook and pull towards you. So if you had a attic in a house you could drill under the eve and into the attic space push the cable in and use the Gopher Pole to hook it and pull it towards you. roofs can pitch in at the corners and crawling on insulation and clearing an area to get the cable can be very uncomfortable. this makes it easier hook and pull towards you saves on time saves you money and there's so many tricks you would come up with having the this tool. This is the professional tool for sure . Shoot the cable far and accurate
great vid awesome content very good one good thing you can do is start have audio sync better that can be done by simple sounds to line up time line in editing im picky sorry but i learned a ton good work
Thank for share your experiences. I am a new telecommunications technician. Question: When you install a cable or cables and there are many cables and infrastructure (like an air conditioning) above the ceiling, What is the standard? Do you install the cables using a push pole and leave the cables on the ceiling or you have to push the cables to the top of the infrastuctures. What are your recomendations?. Thanks!!!
I think if you are using CM type cable you have to use conduit or other means to guard your cable, but with CMR or plenum you dont have to, is not regulated because it fire retardant, howerver if you can group them they would be nicer but no one would see that anyway, it matters for troubleshoot in the future.
Hi Jim, thanks for taking the time for explaining everything... i am an installer from Ecuador, and i was wondering, it is costumed over there to pull the cable without any kind of conduit? or other kind of things? or i am missing something?.. do you lay the cables on the celling? thanks for answering me
+DanielFaour Not sure how things are there, but in the U.S most ceilings in businesses are drop ceilings with acoustic tiles. All electrical cables are inside flex conduit (or sometimes rigid). Low voltage cables (data, voice, speakers, etc) are pulled through the red iron, or they are placed in j-hooks (or Arlington saddles [cable tie hangers]) that are hung from j-wires shot into the concrete ceiling with a Hilti gun (a powder-actuated tool) every 3 to 6 feet. In some locations flex tubing (plastic conduit) is required, but not very often. One thing you have to know is, installations differ drastically depending on what area of the country you are in. What is standard in the Southern states might be totally different in the Northeastern states. Also, there are very few union jobs in the Southern states, while almost all of the jobs done in Northeast are done by union workers following union conventions. it's impossible to say it is done this way or that way when referring to the entire United States; it differs too much.
Actually when you pull from the IT room to the offices - when you try to pull the longer ones farther to the data jacks farther away, they get tangled up with the short ones and you can't pull them separately. If you put the boxes at the offices and pull towards the IT room, this is avoided. The cable ends join together in the ceiling, then the home run is made into the IT room and all the cable ends are together and run into the patch panel area.
as an ex cableguy, i am wondering why there is no usage of cableducts above the ceiling, or pipes of sorts? Overhere in europe you get fired for pulling wires on top of a ceiling like this .
Its not a rule in the states to use conduits on any installation? In Mexico its a REQUIREMENT by law. Even on my Certifications as 3M, AMP/Tyco, Hubbell, Panduit, they teach us to use conduits or Cablofil, or anything to support the cable. So, I wonder if it is a requirement the use of conduit or anything to support the cable, apart of the Jhook.
cat6 isn't really necessary unless high speed is a must have for your work environment. i.e. an IT office, command center, hospital nurse stations, etc.
No reason to waste CAT6 unless doing long runs and large bundles. If you're running less than 10ft CAT5e is fine, very low interference under 24 wires.
I'm getting away from 66 or 110 blocks. Terminate on patch panels with minimum cat5e. Especially when copper is going away and my customers will eventually have to upgrade to hosted or IP communications equipment. I can walk in and sell them a system with no added expense of rewiring.
Unless you're on the mobile cell system, you are still going to need cabling. Even Wi-Fi access points need to be wired back to the router. If you're dealing with VoIP phones you are still going to need copper cabling.
Excellent work there. Many respects for your efforts in sharing this with us. Pulling cables will always be the best way to provide fast secure internet to users.
I agree with you. Thank you for your comments. I appreciate that. Also thank you for subscribing.
Jim: Even though this video was created 4 years ago, it is right on the mark and very, well done. Having been in the telco business for 45+ years your recommendations and suggestions are what I learned, practice and live by. Respect for the co-crafts is a plus acknowledging their fine work and practices. Confidentiality points gain high marks for good customer respect, and relations. You are so correct stating it is the customers place to make any announcements. I highly recommend this video for someone new and entering this craft field. Well done!
What a wealth of information ! Jim Gibson you are the man . you add the professional finishing touch to my installations -Carlos Salegio Tampa, FL
As an IT Tech this video is very helpful for me because cabling is one of my daily task. Thanks a lot for this wonderful video
We used the cable identifier in a small 50 cable install in our new warehouse and it worked like a dream. Easy peasy the way I like it! Thanks for inventing it Jim!
I can't even believe this content is up for free. Incredible. Thank you so much! I'll definitely call you guys for anything I need.
Awesome, thank you!
Watched it from start to finish without any breaks, thats how much I was glued to the screen. Great video!
this person speaks very professional way. i enjoyed watching
Very nice install and great advice/tips. One thing towards the end 51:40--I would never let a tech punch down a jack using a customer's wall. If you miss or slip while terminating, your tools can mark up the surface (or even put a hole in the drywall) around the wall plate. I carry a small piece of 1x4 and use that behind the keystone's when punching down. Thanks for the videos you guys rock!
I think he purposely punched down on the lower part of the wall which would be covered by base trim.
great point on the firewall requirements. I didn't know the low voltage had to be in a metal box, also.
Check your local code. Every time you breach a fire wall you will need a fire prof (metal) box. If it is not a fire wall you do not need a metal box for low voltage.
Thanks for watching ! Please subscribe !! It will make my day!
The right tools always help make things go smoother.
Great video training, best training on step by step structured cabling.
Glad it helped, Please give me a thumbs-up and subscribe !
Thank you, I've started out in IT with laying cat5 / fibre cables back in 1996 - after that never did cabling again in a fulltime/professional manner. this brought a good refresh for me, many things have improved...!
Thanks you so much Jim Gibson, I really learn from teaching i got some advantages through watching your video.
You are very welcome
Thank you. A great insight to cabling for students
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you for this video Sir. I appreciate very much your work. From Barcelona (Spain)
what a great video!!!...thanx for your clear and concise tips for cable system installations!!
Excellent Video you just got yourself a new customer, Thanks!!!
"But remember, if you're a professional, keep it neat!" - way more companies should live up to this! I'm always upset, if companies leave a mess, or do sloppy work because 'you won't see it anyways afterwards'... Really good video!
Thank you for the uploading it helped me a lot as im a new comer for the network feild and i did a lot of mistakes but now i think i can save time and do a neat job at the same time thanks again mr gibson
I'm a CCTV installer, my daily job also like this, Thanks sir.
Great 👍
Wow! Didn't know about that cable identifier with the LEDs and power supply! Certainly a huge time saver when it's time to figure out which jack is what.
I've just learned a lot of things I had no idea of! Thank you so much!
In my state (Georgia), it is a code violation to run cable on top of ceiling tile, because the weight can compromise the grid. Technically, all cables have to be on their own independent support system, such as j-hooks, however sometimes that's impossible to do in buildings where cables have been ran differently in years past. We always install J-hooks on new construction. When we're working in post-construction work spaces, we run the cable above air duct and away from sprinkler/water pipes. Running cable on sprinkler pipes is a BIG no-no in my state.
If you have concerns about the weight of the cable bringing down the ceiling then you have other issues. Running cable on existing air ducts is far worse.
Same in my State (Massachusetts). Cabling has to be self supporting. Can't even tie to grid supports.
This is reality. Great video
Glad you think so!
thank you! your video is pure gold!
Great video. Lots of helpful info. Highly recommend novice view for training purposes.
Awesome video, learned a few new time saving techniques and will definitely be ordering that cable identifier tool!
Thank you sir. I would try to follow your steps and do my best as a professional.
I love your videos. Very educational.
Great video, I especially loved the "led" identification method, alot faster than the tone and probe method.
Nice Job Jim. Learned quite a few things. Thanks !
so friendly, and natural. really informative video
Thank you
Nice video. I had our company buy those cable identifiers and has shaved off tons of time when doing patch work. Thanks!
It does save a ton of time. pays for itself in one install.
@@CableSupply oh yeah. First time I used it, I think it did pay for itself. very simple.
I like the idea of cable identifiers
Jim - Great video! Lots of good information. I installed cable for many years and we always labeled the cables as we ran the cable and I love the idea of not having to label the cable to save time. However, I am now an IT Manager of a medium sized office (240 drops) and I actually like having the cables labeled in order for better troubleshooting. When a certain section of numbers is down it makes it easier to determine the cause. Is it the switch?, or did someone cut a section of cable?, etc. I would much rather spend the time to label the cables from the beginning when the time does not matter as much. When you have network outages is when the real time matters.
Just a thought.
Great video, learned a lot from behind the scene cabling installation. Subscribed. Many thanks :)
This was SO informative! I love your emphasis on organization and cleanliness. I learned a lot!
Wow. Learned a crap load about cabling in just this one video.
Thank you for this amazing video
Florida requires fire rated back boards. Love watching your videos!
Required in CA also
This video was great. Thank you very much.
you do need to identify cables before patching to patch panel for cleanliness when plugging into switch. also when corporate has a standard place for each cable on the install guide.
I love Cable Identifier It's AWESOME!!!
I love your Video Jim! Greetings from Philippines.
Thanks Jim, some great time saving tips here.
Thx, Jim. Appreciate your instruction.
Great job. I learned a lot from this video
Very helpful and the job looks great
Thanks Jim . I'll toss you some of my ideas after I wrap my brain around my first job . 85 stations ! Wish me luck , huh ? K .
+Dylevel7 how did it go
So how was it ?
VERY EDUCATIVE...LOVE THAT!!!
Great video, Thanks for sharing!
Very educational
Thank you verry much, best video ever. Worth subcribing.
Awesome!
Thank you Jim Like the L.E.D S to ring them out save time not labeling cable
Wow, in Sweden we pretty much put everything in 20 mm or 50 mm PVC pipes. It's required in many places, also sometimes Halogen free. Seems so easy to do it the "throw across the ceiling way"... Although I do professional fire alarms, burglar alarms, networks, video cameras etc...
Great video.
26:20 - Use a draw string attached to a 50LBS crossbow, to shoot the draw string +- 100ft in 2 seconds. I don't know if there is a more efficient way.
excelent, great video, thanks for sharing...
Very good my brother
Awesome video, learned a lot!
Thanks a million Jim. Hey I have a question. When you hooked up two RJ11's with two pair from the same cable. You attached the blue pair in one jack and the orange pair in the second jack So you only put two wires in each of the RJ11 jacks. Which positions on the jack did you connect the blue wires and which positions on the jack did you attach the orange wires?
Nick Uranga He would attach the orange wires to the blue pair on the on the keystone.
The blue on the jack is the middle 2 pins
Most digital phone systems and regular phone lines or POTS lines use the middle pins . Conductors 4 and 5 in the middle
Thanks Jim.........good stuff!
Hi Jim,
I love your videos & I want to thank you for taking the time to share with everyone. I do have 1 question though, y are you still cabling with CAT 5 and not CAT 6?
I understand what you mean about time efficiency with the not noting on install the locations but when you have something like that 4gang plate, doesn't it look unprofessional having non sequential ports? So rather than 4,5,6,7 having 10,3,8,15?
I LOVE the LED idea! Do you go back and do a full 8 light cable check later?
Every job I've ever been on the cables had to be in order. What extra cables are added after the job doesn't matter. Depends on the customer. I think it looks better when they're in order. But, to each their own.
cybererik1 You're right, it's really up to the customer. The biggest issues is when you're doing hundreds of jacks, it can take a half hour or more to just find the cable that's numbered. The more cables you have, the more complex it becomes, and the harder it is to do a clean cut. Most of Jim's customers do not care whether they are in order on the floor, but rather that they are in order on the patch panel, and clearly labeled on the face plate. But, you are right - everyone has a different way of doing it!
***** It really doesn't matter - it's all up to the customer. However, if a customer requests that we go in order and it's more than 10-15 outlets, we have to add additional labor for the install. In the last 25 years, we have installed over 6000 installations throughout the country, and very few of them have been installed in a clockwise or counterclockwise order. The larger the installation, the longer it takes per cable to install in order. The LED cable identifier has saved us hundreds of hours and has helped us pass on the savings to our customers. One last thing - the LED identifier is not meant to test the proper pin-out, it is only meant to ID a particular cable.
Its a pity your website doesnt supply to the UK as would love that cable identifier combo kit - even noticed its now available on amazon.com but i still cant order it from there either 🙁
What kind of waist tool bag/pouch is that?? and what tools does he have on it? i really like the setup.
awesome video ty!
Your are mazing people, I don't have to come over to USA for a training, well thanks a lot, of cause Who els can I buy the stuff from. This is Benny from Australia.
hey Jim, I want to startup a network service biz, I was wondering if you could advise how much or how to charge for the cabling service? and also how to marketing network cabling service and where to find the job? thanks very much for your insightful video, i also thing of buying tools and supply from your online store. thanks
thank you!
A lot of people are conflicted on running cable like this because all the problems that might be. So when they do figure out the cost might be higher then what they originally quoted for. So my question is Do you quote something per drop and leave a little something in there just incase of problems on that drop or is it better to a quote for the whole job including the drops and other things? That is something i always wonder what would be the best way to deal with something like that.
check out my video on how to quote a cabling job
That push pole looks pretty nifty, I'm an electrician and usually use a 10ft piece of 3/4 or 1/2" pvc with the bell end cut off. I do a lot of service work in stores and offices running new lines for receptacles and whatnot and MC or BX cable in a dropped ceiling can be a pain in the arse. Would that telescoping push pole work with a single 12/2 armored cable?
JimFPV yes it would work just tape it on the back end . It's one of the best tools you can have you'll find more uses once you have one . On the end is a hook you can telescope the gopher pole out and hook and pull towards you. So if you had a attic in a house you could drill under the eve and into the attic space push the cable in and use the Gopher Pole to hook it and pull it towards you. roofs can pitch in at the corners and crawling on insulation and clearing an area to get the cable can be very uncomfortable. this makes it easier hook and pull towards you saves on time saves you money and there's so many tricks you would come up with having the this tool. This is the professional tool for sure . Shoot the cable far and accurate
great vid
awesome content very good
one good thing you can do is start have audio sync better that can be done by simple sounds to line up time line in editing
im picky sorry but i learned a ton
good work
very helpful
Hi Jim! What do you call the LED connectors and testing equipment used at the end?
Good &well
I would like to know why Cat 5E is being used not something from the Category 6 family?
You only install Cat6 if the client/customer asks for it. It's their option to choose the extra cost.
Thank for share your experiences. I am a new telecommunications technician. Question: When you install a cable or cables and there are many cables and infrastructure (like an air conditioning) above the ceiling, What is the standard? Do you install the cables using a push pole and leave the cables on the ceiling or you have to push the cables to the top of the infrastuctures. What are your recomendations?. Thanks!!!
I think if you are using CM type cable you have to use conduit or other means to guard your cable, but with CMR or plenum you dont have to, is not regulated because it fire retardant, howerver if you can group them they would be nicer but no one would see that anyway, it matters for troubleshoot in the future.
LED indicators are great!
This video is very awsome! You can loose the camerman though.
Very nice sir.
Cable information but sir this cable tester name please
Let me check
that light power supply is a saving. ill subscribe you :)
I will like to know more on it sir
How do you swap out a wire on a 24 port panel when you do it that way? Seems like it would be tough to get to early set ones
Hi Jim, thanks for taking the time for explaining everything... i am an installer from Ecuador, and i was wondering, it is costumed over there to pull the cable without any kind of conduit? or other kind of things? or i am missing something?.. do you lay the cables on the celling? thanks for answering me
DanielFaourCableSupply.com Never Mind... you answer me later on the Video!.
+DanielFaour Not sure how things are there, but in the U.S most ceilings in businesses are drop ceilings with acoustic tiles. All electrical cables are inside flex conduit (or sometimes rigid). Low voltage cables (data, voice, speakers, etc) are pulled through the red iron, or they are placed in j-hooks (or Arlington saddles [cable tie hangers]) that are hung from j-wires shot into the concrete ceiling with a Hilti gun (a powder-actuated tool) every 3 to 6 feet. In some locations flex tubing (plastic conduit) is required, but not very often. One thing you have to know is, installations differ drastically depending on what area of the country you are in. What is standard in the Southern states might be totally different in the Northeastern states. Also, there are very few union jobs in the Southern states, while almost all of the jobs done in Northeast are done by union workers following union conventions. it's impossible to say it is done this way or that way when referring to the entire United States; it differs too much.
Actually when you pull from the IT room to the offices - when you try to pull the longer ones farther to the data jacks farther away, they get tangled up with the short ones and you can't pull them separately. If you put the boxes at the offices and pull towards the IT room, this is avoided. The cable ends join together in the ceiling, then the home run is made into the IT room and all the cable ends are together and run into the patch panel area.
KT thanks for your comments , but I disagree I always pull from a central location (data room). I have not had the experience you described.
very good and helpfull
as an ex cableguy, i am wondering why there is no usage of cableducts above the ceiling, or pipes of sorts?
Overhere in europe you get fired for pulling wires on top of a ceiling like this
.
E.C. Bart
I was also expecting the cables to be suspended in conduit or something.
One or two cable is fine with code. However you are right if there was a large bundle of cables, I would use "J HOOKS".
Its not a rule in the states to use conduits on any installation? In Mexico its a REQUIREMENT by law. Even on my Certifications as 3M, AMP/Tyco, Hubbell, Panduit, they teach us to use conduits or Cablofil, or anything to support the cable. So, I wonder if it is a requirement the use of conduit or anything to support the cable, apart of the Jhook.
any reason for using cat 5e in this day and time?
now we talking abt 10 gig cat6a and 7
Cat5E is still the standard for a basic setup.
cat6 isn't really necessary unless high speed is a must have for your work environment. i.e. an IT office, command center, hospital nurse stations, etc.
unless your running a IT room no need
No reason to waste CAT6 unless doing long runs and large bundles. If you're running less than 10ft CAT5e is fine, very low interference under 24 wires.
please what is the name of LED device used to identifies various jacks
Cable Identifier, sold on WWW.CableSupply.com
verrryy helpfful
The answer is probably no but do you ship to australia. I cant seem to find your cable identifiers anywhere.
+Blackjack4141 We do ship to Australia! The cable identifiers are made in-house and are actually one of Jim's personal inventions.
what is the model device cable identified and how much with RJ ?
Why would you not use a full size it cabinet?
what is the name of that black tape?
Hook and loop. sometimes called Velcro
I'm getting away from 66 or 110 blocks. Terminate on patch panels with minimum cat5e. Especially when copper is going away and my customers will eventually have to upgrade to hosted or IP communications equipment. I can walk in and sell them a system with no added expense of rewiring.
Unless you're on the mobile cell system, you are still going to need cabling. Even Wi-Fi access points need to be wired back to the router. If you're dealing with VoIP phones you are still going to need copper cabling.
ur the boss
tHIS made my day! :)
Yes