To every Low Voltage Electrician? Watching this is pure harmony. However, I would negate the Zap Straps for Velcro. But I would be a Liar if I said that I did not too do the same. Instead of Labels? I just use a Sharpie. Hard to get a Punch down tool in those tight space, so glad you got it done in place.
I would also replace the hard patches with keystones. Much easier to move around (which I've done a few times myself). The added cost is negligible compared to the hours paid.
Neatness is ok but I am a fan of shorter Patch cables. The setup in the rack seems like it could be improved on to have shorter patches which in my experience is more serviceable.
Just small Tip: Permament Labels -> First tie over the cable and next bend over the label so that it will additionally secure label from falling of as the cable part will be glued from both sides :D
To those who mention the labeling + patch/switch arrangement: I suspect that this was existing wiring they had to deal with, identify and clean up. Or who knows. And I suspect they needed very specific patch ports to go to specific switches, so the paths are actually all different, it just looks clean. You can't always just jump patch ports 25-48 to switch ports 1-24 and vice versa. Then you have to choose if you keep your patch panels linear (to serially match the wall ports), or patch by function. I'm debating that in my upcoming install though I prefer the latter. Seemed like they possibly did the former.
L'organizzazione di un Rack è a discrezione del progettista, se si tratta di un Rack misto (permute e prodotti attivi) è necessario sapere a priori la profondità degli apparati, le ventole se hanno spazio sopra e sotto per il ricambio d'aria, ecc... Se si tratta di un Rack passivo, cioè solo un quadro di permutazione per un rilancio o con accanto un altro Rack attivo, bisognerebbe sapere almeno se si trova in un Ced con ventilazione forzata (corridoio caldo, corridoio freddo) ecc. Per i pannelli di permuta (patch panel) già da sole 48 / 72 porte (a maggior ragione per Rack più popolati, come questo) preferisco disporre la seguenza del cablaggio per topologica fisica della rete, cioè piano, stanza, presa, in seguenza progressiva e relativa numerazione. E quindi non per destinazione d'uso, perché potrebbe cambiare nel tempo (porta client, porta server, trunking, telefono, telefonica IP, dati).. trattandosi di cablaggio strutturato. Magari una distinzione posso farla mettendo in alto i patch panel con le dorsali da Rack a Rack in rame e/o i cassetti ottici. Poi senz'altro le patch cord di diverso colore per destinazione d'uso (celesti dati, verdi fonia, gialle dorsali, a discrezione del cliente e dell'amministratore di rete). Consegno i Rack con misurazioni e relative certificazioni sul cablaggio in rame e fibra. Francesco
I am new in this kind of work, and the setup looks very neat and nice, but isn’t it better to have the related patch panels and switches be closer to each other, that way you only use a small cat6 cable to connect them right above each other, that way it will be easier for maintenance later; for example if there’s a problem with one specific cable with this kind of setup you might need to remove lots of cables so you can reach the specified cable but when the switch and panel are right above each other only a small cable needs to be removed or changed, i don’t know what do you think?
amazing work! My only comment is that its much faster , cheaper and easier for the next guy that may come to do a work in there to use the standard - patch panel , switch , patch panel. Working this way its much more serviceable and you can use much smaller patch cables.. Other than this amazing!
Thank you Sir. Sir, I want to know, how to measure and cut the LAN cables for 60 computers in computer lab. If possible, kindly upload that video Sir. Thank you. 🙏🏽🙂
Curious though. For cleanliness wouldn't it have made more sense to run the cat5 through the holes in the cable management slot and feed them up or down through the grooves so you could tidy up all cabling in the back instead of the front?
First use Punch Down Tool, its gonna make your life easier. Second and more important, you are untwisting pairs a bit to much. Its probably gonna pass for cat6, but still, just do it the right way. Also that patch panel is awful, i understand sometimes you have to work with what you are given, but you have nothing to secure your cable to...Otherwise, its very decent job, i would personally go up and then come down on the other side with cables just to leave enough for equipment shuffling in the future (and that's gonna happen for sure). Respect for cable labelling.
Pretty nice. I am not sure why you would go with smaller port number switches, but maybe the PoE limits were the cause. I think spending a little extra on something with good forced cooling, dual power supply, and 50 ports is way to go almost always, even in smaller setup. It makes less mess, and gives you flexibility later.
Harnessing lvl is 10% skilled.. First thing u need to do in elv works is the design and cabling skills.. this is begginer lvl.. Using cable comb for harness Velcro Tagging Design lvl,
Thank you Sir. Sir, I want to know, how to measure and cut the LAN cables for 60 computers in computer lab. If possible, kindly upload that video Sir. Thank you. 🙏🏽🙂
May look pretty but not to Structured Cabling Standards. You don’t use Tie Wraps (aka, zip ties) on data cables. It distorts the twists in the cable causing attenuation and crosstalk. When you run the cables where they run parallel tie wrapped together it causes alien crosstalk (look it up). Is the bay grounded? Different categories of Patch Panels. Different manufacturers of patch panels with some CAT5E and some Cat6. Too much untwisted in the termination and not using the proper punch down tool. Look up BISCi standards and patch panel manufacturers standards. Belden, Lucent, AMP, and Panduit all have installation standards available online.
I see that there are too many cat6 cables in the structure. If it could have been shaped differently. With core switch aggretion switch and access switches, this cable pile could have been reduced to a much smaller size. A much better structure could have been established with multi-mode fiber or single-mode fiber. Of course, I don't know what kind of structure is there right now.
do not get me wrong it looks pretty but the only reason you would ever do the runs like this is if you want each zone on there own patch panel and wanted each receptacle connected to a specific router for multiple internal networks the more common practice is you use short jumps from patch panel to router the only other reason i can think of doing this is to show off your wire-fuu which i will say is quite good
I’m just learn to do this type of work as of 3 days ago. I’ve been in the cable industry from 19 years and never learned this side of cabling🤦🏾♂️….now to the video, why would you use zip ties on those cables coming down from the ceiling and like some one else pointed out….those are not 24ct bundles. I get that you guys may have toned those lines 😮💨😮💨 but why didn’t you guys use Velcro straps
Next time you work, attach the switches one under the other with paccord sockets, you will not have to use very long paccord cable. 10 cm paccord cable will do the job.
Smaller cabinet, have deeper cable managers when using longer patch cables, rather than feeding everything to the side. Looks nice, but defeats the purpose of a cable manager, and screws anyone trying to feed wire through in the future. But looks ok.
Thanks for your comment first of all bro this is a cat 6A STPcable it is too hard to handle with velcro even if we use velcro as you say after 1 year its gone lose that's why we use zip tai I'm sure its not hurting the cable❤️
@@naturefuturetech ahh ok, as long as you dont like death tie it lol, i have seen some jobs where they tie it so tight it actually cuts into the shielding
Need to use a compression punchdown tool and probably a better cable stripping tool. The way in which this was done will cause the connections to fail prematurely. Not to mention with the cheap cable stripper, there is a much easier chance of cutting into the pairs and if you nick the copper, it will weaken the connection. Sure, good tools are expensive but they make all the difference. I also agree with the comments that the patch cables are too long. I have come to realize over my career that it is better to use short (1-2ft) cables then stack the switches or use high capacity fiber between the switches and better engineer the traffic than use long cables stuffed and pinched into a rack like that which risks early cable failure.
Neat job, thorough… but you stick a very permanent rack on a high wall nook and keep it on WHEELS? 😂 Please at least tell me I missed a part and it's bolted to the wall…
Pro-tip, label the ends before you pull them. Will save you hours upon hours tracing. Also keep track of your run length and how much is left in the box !
There are two main metrics: 1. Good work per standards/best practices & 2. Looking good to the eyes. Aesthetics. It is possible to reach either one and not the other. However, for reliable data communications, #1 is preferred over #2. To some installers and clients, they tend to feel 'satisfied' with #2 over #1. To a professional, both have equal weight! The professional and responsable client would first prefer that installers wear PPE! Then have and use correct/proper tools. I'm wondering, isn't there a way to prevent so much wasted cable? It adds up. Any installation method that may affect the cable's geometry will negatively affect performance. Installation must consider (ease of) maintenance. Then again budget$$$ determine a lot. What was the objective of the video again?😅
Not grounding the shielding is an oopsie. Disregarding the fact that you paid for sielded cable and you don't use it, if the shielding doesn't connect to ground it can act as an antenna and instead of blocking EMF it draws it.
Seriously? That is not CAT6a compliant at all. The twist should be maintained right up to the IDC terminal. I didn't see a support bar for the cables. Use a proper impact punch down tool like a Fluke/Harris. It will properly seat the wires as well as cut the tails in a single stroke. Label each cable at 1,2,3 fist back for east identification. Last, 4 days to do two days worth of work is not impressive.
Любители двойной работы, сразу кабеля биркуются, что бы потом пару часов не вызванивать и не бегать по кабинетам) Итоговое биркование без вопросов, там длина неизвестна по началу.
No bro we use cat 6 A patch panel for cat 6 A cable and for STP cable use cat 6 patch panel but in 1 patch panel we use some cable for CAT 6 because we don't have more space for extra patch panel
That's called a patch panel. It is not technically necessary. You can build your entire network without it and it will still function just fine. The reason we use patch panels, especially in large networks is to make the cabling more organized and easy to work with instead of having a mess of cables running all over the place to the switch. With the patch panel, you just patch in whatever ports you need to make the connections active. If you have a wing of 5 classrooms and each classroom has 10 data drops, that's 50 network cables running into the network rack. All the ports should be labeled accordingly on both ends. Once you have this setup correctly, it makes it incredibly easy to activate a network port. So for example, if you have Room 5, port 15 that needs to be active, you just go to the patch panel and plug in a patch cable (ethernet cable) from port 15 at the panel into whatever port you need on the switch and its live.
To every Low Voltage Electrician? Watching this is pure harmony. However, I would negate the Zap Straps for Velcro. But I would be a Liar if I said that I did not too do the same. Instead of Labels? I just use a Sharpie.
Hard to get a Punch down tool in those tight space, so glad you got it done in place.
🤗🤗🤗
I would also replace the hard patches with keystones. Much easier to move around (which I've done a few times myself). The added cost is negligible compared to the hours paid.
Neatness is ok but I am a fan of shorter Patch cables. The setup in the rack seems like it could be improved on to have shorter patches which in my experience is more serviceable.
order, cleanliness, results in a beautiful job, well done, congratulations!
Thank you 😊🌹
Easy work. I did it 1000+ times. Prefer to use shorter patch cables.
Just small Tip: Permament Labels -> First tie over the cable and next bend over the label so that it will additionally secure label from falling of as the cable part will be glued from both sides :D
Beautiful job, well done, congratulations!
Just improve on the labeling a bit (E.g. 109,110,111,112) not (109,1010,1011,1012).
Sure
To those who mention the labeling + patch/switch arrangement: I suspect that this was existing wiring they had to deal with, identify and clean up. Or who knows. And I suspect they needed very specific patch ports to go to specific switches, so the paths are actually all different, it just looks clean. You can't always just jump patch ports 25-48 to switch ports 1-24 and vice versa. Then you have to choose if you keep your patch panels linear (to serially match the wall ports), or patch by function. I'm debating that in my upcoming install though I prefer the latter. Seemed like they possibly did the former.
Yeah…from the start of the video, you could see that it was preexisting cables. They cut them and toned them out
L'organizzazione di un Rack è a discrezione del progettista, se si tratta di un Rack misto (permute e prodotti attivi) è necessario sapere a priori la profondità degli apparati, le ventole se hanno spazio sopra e sotto per il ricambio d'aria, ecc...
Se si tratta di un Rack passivo, cioè solo un quadro di permutazione per un rilancio o con accanto un altro Rack attivo, bisognerebbe sapere almeno se si trova in un Ced con ventilazione forzata (corridoio caldo, corridoio freddo) ecc.
Per i pannelli di permuta (patch panel) già da sole 48 / 72 porte (a maggior ragione per Rack più popolati, come questo) preferisco disporre la seguenza del cablaggio per topologica fisica della rete, cioè piano, stanza, presa, in seguenza progressiva e relativa numerazione. E quindi non per destinazione d'uso, perché potrebbe cambiare nel tempo (porta client, porta server, trunking, telefono, telefonica IP, dati).. trattandosi di cablaggio strutturato.
Magari una distinzione posso farla mettendo in alto i patch panel con le dorsali da Rack a Rack in rame e/o i cassetti ottici.
Poi senz'altro le patch cord di diverso colore per destinazione d'uso (celesti dati, verdi fonia, gialle dorsali, a discrezione del cliente e dell'amministratore di rete). Consegno i Rack con misurazioni e relative certificazioni sul cablaggio in rame e fibra. Francesco
Great organization congratulations
I am new in this kind of work, and the setup looks very neat and nice, but isn’t it better to have the related patch panels and switches be closer to each other, that way you only use a small cat6 cable to connect them right above each other, that way it will be easier for maintenance later; for example if there’s a problem with one specific cable with this kind of setup you might need to remove lots of cables so you can reach the specified cable but when the switch and panel are right above each other only a small cable needs to be removed or changed, i don’t know what do you think?
amazing work! My only comment is that its much faster , cheaper and easier for the next guy that may come to do a work in there to use the standard - patch panel , switch , patch panel. Working this way its much more serviceable and you can use much smaller patch cables.. Other than this amazing!
nice and beautiful work
🌹❤️🌹
THANK YOU FOR THIS VIDEO....REALLY APPRICIATE...
❤️🌹❤️
GREAT JOB👏THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THIS VIDEO🙏💐
Thank you Sir. Sir, I want to know, how to measure and cut the LAN cables for 60 computers in computer lab. If possible, kindly upload that video Sir. Thank you. 🙏🏽🙂
It’s great to see these cabinet products in action in the field, thank you for your great work😇
Very zen and satisfying video for us tech people
Curious though. For cleanliness wouldn't it have made more sense to run the cat5 through the holes in the cable management slot and feed them up or down through the grooves so you could tidy up all cabling in the back instead of the front?
First use Punch Down Tool, its gonna make your life easier. Second and more important, you are untwisting pairs a bit to much. Its probably gonna pass for cat6, but still, just do it the right way. Also that patch panel is awful, i understand sometimes you have to work with what you are given, but you have nothing to secure your cable to...Otherwise, its very decent job, i would personally go up and then come down on the other side with cables just to leave enough for equipment shuffling in the future (and that's gonna happen for sure). Respect for cable labelling.
I noticed the same thing, too much untwist at patch panel, and i don't think it will certify for cat6
Great work! Respect and +100 points for proffesionalism.
Thanks🌹for your support
Ajay
Well done
Thanks 🙏
The my fellow peep's is a work of art!! I do have a question: Did the casters ever come off? If not that would give me worry.
excellent! marvelous
Great job turning chaos into order.
Pretty nice. I am not sure why you would go with smaller port number switches, but maybe the PoE limits were the cause. I think spending a little extra on something with good forced cooling, dual power supply, and 50 ports is way to go almost always, even in smaller setup. It makes less mess, and gives you flexibility later.
🤩🤩
Great work guys
Thank you so much 😀
C'est très cool ❤❤❤ j'ai vraiment aimé
♥️🌹
Harnessing lvl is 10% skilled..
First thing u need to do in elv works is the design and cabling skills.. this is begginer lvl..
Using cable comb for harness
Velcro
Tagging
Design lvl,
great work you have graet thanks
🌹💕🌹
Good work thanks
🌹❤️🌹
Thank you Sir. Sir, I want to know, how to measure and cut the LAN cables for 60 computers in computer lab. If possible, kindly upload that video Sir. Thank you. 🙏🏽🙂
May look pretty but not to Structured Cabling Standards. You don’t use Tie Wraps (aka, zip ties) on data cables. It distorts the twists in the cable causing attenuation and crosstalk. When you run the cables where they run parallel tie wrapped together it causes alien crosstalk (look it up). Is the bay grounded?
Different categories of Patch Panels. Different manufacturers of patch panels with some CAT5E and some Cat6. Too much untwisted in the termination and not using the proper punch down tool. Look up BISCi standards and patch panel manufacturers standards. Belden, Lucent, AMP, and Panduit all have installation standards available online.
That is one hell of a build out I'm jelly lol.
What I don't understand is that you're using shielded cables and unshielded patch panels.
but otherwise neatly installed.
I actually learnt a few things from this vid, thanks
❤️🌹❤️
I see that there are too many cat6 cables in the structure. If it could have been shaped differently. With core switch aggretion switch and access switches, this cable pile could have been reduced to a much smaller size. A much better structure could have been established with multi-mode fiber or single-mode fiber. Of course, I don't know what kind of structure is there right now.
Very good
🌹❤️🌹
Why these long cable runs? Why not patch directly with short cables? 6 inch or 10 inch
do not get me wrong it looks pretty but the only reason you would ever do the runs like this is if you want each zone on there own patch panel and wanted each receptacle connected to a specific router for multiple internal networks
the more common practice is you use short jumps from patch panel to router
the only other reason i can think of doing this is to show off your wire-fuu which i will say is quite good
I’m just learn to do this type of work as of 3 days ago. I’ve been in the cable industry from 19 years and never learned this side of cabling🤦🏾♂️….now to the video, why would you use zip ties on those cables coming down from the ceiling and like some one else pointed out….those are not 24ct bundles. I get that you guys may have toned those lines 😮💨😮💨 but why didn’t you guys use Velcro straps
Next time you work, attach the switches one under the other with paccord sockets, you will not have to use very long paccord cable. 10 cm paccord cable will do the job.
Sure bro🌹
Thanks to share.❤
🌹🌹🌹
Smaller cabinet, have deeper cable managers when using longer patch cables, rather than feeding everything to the side. Looks nice, but defeats the purpose of a cable manager, and screws anyone trying to feed wire through in the future. But looks ok.
You have my full respect!
Thanks 👍🌹
How I wish to learn from you guys 👍👍
i would use velcro ties instead of zip ties, the zip ties can smash the cable and unwinds the cat twists and cause crosstalk
Thanks for your comment first of all bro this is a cat 6A STPcable it is too hard to handle with velcro even if we use velcro as you say after 1 year its gone lose that's why we use zip tai I'm sure its not hurting the cable❤️
@@naturefuturetech ahh ok, as long as you dont like death tie it lol, i have seen some jobs where they tie it so tight it actually cuts into the shielding
Lmao been using zip ties for years never had an issue.
Never mash a cable if you know what your doing
Need to use a compression punchdown tool and probably a better cable stripping tool. The way in which this was done will cause the connections to fail prematurely. Not to mention with the cheap cable stripper, there is a much easier chance of cutting into the pairs and if you nick the copper, it will weaken the connection.
Sure, good tools are expensive but they make all the difference.
I also agree with the comments that the patch cables are too long. I have come to realize over my career that it is better to use short (1-2ft) cables then stack the switches or use high capacity fiber between the switches and better engineer the traffic than use long cables stuffed and pinched into a rack like that which risks early cable failure.
Really impressed with your work wish to work with you
I love it
Well done 👍
Que gran trabajo
🌹❤️🌹
U/FTP cables with UTP patchpanel !!? - very professional
good job. i prefer to stage patch panel switch, patch panel switch, etc... Less use of patch cables and cleaner aesthetic.
10:13 can u tell me the name of that device which you are inserting the wire. Is that switch?
Cat 6 wire stripper
My job when younger times. Retired peacefully 2021 after 25 years. Now doing something else.
Good job👍
Thanks🌹
Very very good job
🌹❤️
pls use punch down tool, much faster, or the clip that came with the patch panel
great job! India, Pakistan or Bangladesh, I wonder? 🤔
Leave bigger gaps between panels and use wider rack for left and right cable management.
Neat job, thorough… but you stick a very permanent rack on a high wall nook and keep it on WHEELS? 😂 Please at least tell me I missed a part and it's bolted to the wall…
Pro-tip, label the ends before you pull them. Will save you hours upon hours tracing. Also keep track of your run length and how much is left in the box !
i need to know how make lablaning in papers, what printer and paper used
good
🌹❤️
There are two main metrics:
1. Good work per standards/best practices &
2. Looking good to the eyes. Aesthetics.
It is possible to reach either one and not the other.
However, for reliable data communications, #1 is preferred over #2.
To some installers and clients, they tend to feel 'satisfied' with #2 over #1.
To a professional, both have equal weight!
The professional and responsable client would first prefer that installers wear PPE!
Then have and use correct/proper tools.
I'm wondering, isn't there a way to prevent so much wasted cable? It adds up.
Any installation method that may affect the cable's geometry will negatively affect performance.
Installation must consider (ease of) maintenance.
Then again budget$$$ determine a lot.
What was the objective of the video again?😅
Muito belo trabalho. Adoro fazer isso. Só achei estranho o uso de abraçadeira de nylon
😍😍😍😍
It actually requires patience and practice
Sure
Not grounding the shielding is an oopsie. Disregarding the fact that you paid for sielded cable and you don't use it, if the shielding doesn't connect to ground it can act as an antenna and instead of blocking EMF it draws it.
Seriously? That is not CAT6a compliant at all. The twist should be maintained right up to the IDC terminal. I didn't see a support bar for the cables. Use a proper impact punch down tool like a Fluke/Harris. It will properly seat the wires as well as cut the tails in a single stroke. Label each cable at 1,2,3 fist back for east identification. Last, 4 days to do two days worth of work is not impressive.
Любители двойной работы, сразу кабеля биркуются, что бы потом пару часов не вызванивать и не бегать по кабинетам) Итоговое биркование без вопросов, там длина неизвестна по началу.
Always use unload jack panel.
Sure bro we already use you can check other videos but these all item customer buying himself 😔
What is network data centre what its use please reply me
What kind of rack are you using here?
27 U cabinet 600x800
Bro you are using STP Cable in cat 6 Patch panel ..it's wrong you should use CAT6A Patch panel for cat 6 A Cable
No bro we use cat 6 A patch panel for cat 6 A cable and for STP cable use cat 6 patch panel but in 1 patch panel we use some cable for CAT 6 because we don't have more space for extra patch panel
All that changes is copper size, you do have to make sure you get a proper connection with STP but it's really not going to affect anything
Для врезки жилок есть инструмент который сразу хвостики проводов лишние обрезает.
Hi, what printer used to print the label??
Post video, label sticker printing
Халявно сделано если что. Но в принципе наладчики наоборот просят не жгутить, чтобы взаимопроникновения поменьше.
not a fan of tp link and hikvision.. furthermore good job!
❤️🤗
Why is there a rack... on a ledge... with wheels???
Dude … where did you left the sheelding?
what switch do You use?
TP link
Why we use that communication circuit accessory 14:19
That's called a patch panel. It is not technically necessary. You can build your entire network without it and it will still function just fine. The reason we use patch panels, especially in large networks is to make the cabling more organized and easy to work with instead of having a mess of cables running all over the place to the switch. With the patch panel, you just patch in whatever ports you need to make the connections active.
If you have a wing of 5 classrooms and each classroom has 10 data drops, that's 50 network cables running into the network rack. All the ports should be labeled accordingly on both ends. Once you have this setup correctly, it makes it incredibly easy to activate a network port. So for example, if you have Room 5, port 15 that needs to be active, you just go to the patch panel and plug in a patch cable (ethernet cable) from port 15 at the panel into whatever port you need on the switch and its live.
Era necesario mover así la cámara? Me mareó a los 5´ , tuve que dejar de verlo.
What is the maximum length of cable used for the IP camera?
90 M SFTP
@@naturefuturetech thanks
@@naturefuturetech- What??!!! 100m UTP hopefully at least Cat6A. At least that’s what it *should* be.
You to use u/ftp cable on unshild patch panel, ok
Looks ok, but I would hate to troubleshoot it
Nice work, music is annoying tho
😔😔😔🌹
Awesome job and video! Cheers!
🌹❤️😘
Ó az isten barma! Behúzzák a drága árnyékolt kábelt és az első dolga az, hogy a patch panelnél kicsípi az árnyékolószálat és betűzi egy cat5 aljzatba.
Why don't u use a krone tool ?
What are you using to print on these labels?
Probably a brothers label maker…Amazon has them
Cables on patch-panels not secured, yeah, nah. Lots of ports and not enough cheap switching???
what are "UNKNOWN WIRES" labels ????
SALMO☣️☣️☣️☣️ ORIGINAL
ang daming gagawin basta huwag ka lang madaliin😂
Sir rack main server ki cabling kaise hoti h aur installing kaise hoti h isape video bana please
Watch full video please
Kuch dino ke bad a jaye gi
👍
Thanks 🙏
SALMO☣️🤑☣️ ORIGINAL
I want to get this type of training anybody help me pls..😊
There is a small mistake in this video. Did anyone catch it?