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Posted by Mikhail Teterin on July 4, 2008, 9:58 am
Please log in for more thread options We are renovating a just-bought (old) house, and I'd like to run as many wires through the walls now as I can, so as to not have ugly "rat-nests" later... The basement is likely to house the "heavy" computer equipment (like storage -- eBay has plenty of slightly used equipment) with those on the living floors having (mostly?) light -- possibly diskless -- desktops. Assuming I want to do this with fibre (rather than plain old Ethernet), what cables do I want, and what, in general, is there to watch out for? Will I be able to use this same cable for some other purpose -- like transmitting digital audio to one of the rooms, or propagating Verizon's FiOS, or an (optical) FireWire-link from one of the rooms to the server in the basement -- or are those all completly different and incompatible kinds of "fiber"? Thanks in advance for any advice. -mi | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted by Gene S. Berkowitz on July 5, 2008, 11:02 pm
Please log in for more thread options You need to know that with Verizon FiOS, the fiber terminates at an Optical Network Terminal (ONT) box, that is installed either outside or inside the home (mine's in the basement). The ONT provides two outlets, for ethernet cable, and for coax. Most recent installs use the coax only, with a MoCa (Media over Cable) router from ActionTec. The router provides ethernet jacks for your existing network wiring and/or computer. The set-top box (STB) used for FiOS TV is MoCa enabled, and uses the coax for delivery of the video, and to connect to the router for the channel guide and on-demand ordering. As near as I can tell, there is no provision to connect more fiber to the ONT. Verizon used to provide a Network Interface Module from Motorola (the NIM100) that would allow a non-MoCa router to use the coax backbone. These are now pretty scarce, but do show up on Ebay. In Q3 of 2008, D- Link is supposed to be launching their own NIM/MoCa router for around $100. The speed attainable over coax using a couple of these approaches gigabit ethernet rates. For Verizon, it's just simpler to use the existing coax backbone (likely installed by the incumbent cable company) with some smart boxes rather than run fiber through the walls. --Gene | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted by Mikhail Teterin on July 7, 2008, 10:40 am
Please log in for more thread options Gene S. Berkowitz wrote:
> For Verizon, it's just simpler to use the existing coax backbone (likely
> installed by the incumbent cable company) with some smart boxes rather > than run fiber through the walls. Thanks, Gene, for the overview of Verizon-related options, but my question was mostly about in-house fiber in general. One "big idea" is to have a small-scale SAN-box in the basement and no (noisy and heat-generating) disk-drives on the living floors. Also, what about using some of the same cables for, say, digital audio -- I've never been exposed to the practice of fiber-cabling -- do they differ drastically depending on application (like, say, serial vs. Ethernet), or are the cables the same? -mi | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted by Badnitz on July 8, 2008, 11:00 am
Please log in for more thread options If you REALLY want to use fibre, I suggest you consider 50/125 multimode
cable, that should suffice even if you wish to run 10Gb in your house. Use minimum 4 cores to each location, preferable "ruggedised" cable because you can terminate that directly without too many hassels. Yes you will be able to run access control, CCTV and possibly PLC signals accross the same fibre type. Regards -- Albert Badnitz P.O. Box 8 Doonside 4135 SOUTH AFRICA Always interested in :- "BADNITZ" > Hello!
> > We are renovating a just-bought (old) house, and I'd like to run as many > wires through the walls now as I can, so as to not have ugly "rat-nests" > later... > > The basement is likely to house the "heavy" computer equipment (like > storage -- eBay has plenty of slightly used equipment) with those on the > living floors having (mostly?) light -- possibly diskless -- desktops. > > Assuming I want to do this with fibre (rather than plain old Ethernet), > what > cables do I want, and what, in general, is there to watch out for? > > Will I be able to use this same cable for some other purpose -- like > transmitting digital audio to one of the rooms, or propagating Verizon's > FiOS, or an (optical) FireWire-link from one of the rooms to the server in > the basement -- or are those all completly different and incompatible > kinds > of "fiber"? > > Thanks in advance for any advice. > > -mi | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Posted by Mikhail Teterin on July 8, 2008, 1:04 pm
Please log in for more thread options Badnitz wrote:
> If you REALLY want to use fibre, I suggest you consider 50/125 multimode
> cable, that should suffice even if you wish to run 10Gb in your house. > > Use minimum 4 cores to each location, preferable "ruggedised" cable > because you can terminate that directly without too many hassels. Thank you very much for the pointers. Would one of these (to every location) be sufficient: http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=330249629119 Or did you mean, I need four of these to each location? > Yes you will be able to run access control, CCTV and possibly PLC signals
> accross the same fibre type. Cool! Are the connectors and sockets standardized, though? Thanks again! Yours, -mi | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Similar Threads | Posted |
| Wiring a house | July 4, 2008, 9:58 am |
| Verizon FiOS to house | February 14, 2007, 9:40 am |

Wiring a house
Yahoo!
Windows Live
del.icio.us
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Netscape 







>
> We are renovating a just-bought (old) house, and I'd like to run as many
> wires through the walls now as I can, so as to not have ugly "rat-nests"
> later...
>
> The basement is likely to house the "heavy" computer equipment (like
> storage -- eBay has plenty of slightly used equipment) with those on the
> living floors having (mostly?) light -- possibly diskless -- desktops.
>
> Assuming I want to do this with fibre (rather than plain old Ethernet), what
> cables do I want, and what, in general, is there to watch out for?
>
> Will I be able to use this same cable for some other purpose -- like
> transmitting digital audio to one of the rooms, or propagating Verizon's
> FiOS, or an (optical) FireWire-link from one of the rooms to the server in
> the basement -- or are those all completly different and incompatible kinds
> of "fiber"?
>
> Thanks in advance for any advice.
>
> -mi