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  • #16
    Originally posted by brandon01rt View Post
    Buy 2 boxes of cat 5e. If you are doing 2 pulls per location, it will make it easier to pull both home runs at the same time.
    Dis.

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    • #17
      Originally posted by propellerhead View Post
      Newbie question: What's wrong with a wireless router? What's the advantage of going wired when everything is going wireless?
      Because you can lose anywhere from 5% to 60% of your overall speed due to signal degradation, it's always faster using a hard line.
      Originally posted by Jester
      Every time you see the fucking guy....show him your fucking dick.. Just whip out your hawg and wiggle it in his direction, put it away, call him a fuckin meatgazer, shoot him the bird and go inside.
      He will spend the rest of the day wondering if he is gay.
      Originally posted by Denny
      What the fuck ever, you fucking fragile faggot.
      FORGTN SOLD1ER - xbox gamer

      Comment


      • #18
        Originally posted by motoman View Post
        Because you can lose anywhere from 5% to 60% of your overall speed due to signal degradation, it's always faster using a hard line.
        Doesn't wifi run 100 Mbps? That's plenty fast when my DSL is only 5 Mbps. Streaming video from a PC to a TV doesn't need 100 Mbps, does it?
        Last edited by Leah; Yesterday at 10:18 PM.

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        • #19
          Originally posted by propellerhead View Post
          Doesn't wifi run 100 Mbps? That's plenty fast when my DSL is only 5 Mbps. Streaming video from a PC to a TV doesn't need 100 Mbps, does it?
          It's all going to depend on WiFi setup being used but even with that being said, you can have enough signal degradation that can limit the amount of data passing through. I see this all the time at my properties where we use a point to point systems. We'll have a points at 50 yards apart with nothing in the way and see 1Mb speeds on a 30Mb connection.
          Originally posted by Jester
          Every time you see the fucking guy....show him your fucking dick.. Just whip out your hawg and wiggle it in his direction, put it away, call him a fuckin meatgazer, shoot him the bird and go inside.
          He will spend the rest of the day wondering if he is gay.
          Originally posted by Denny
          What the fuck ever, you fucking fragile faggot.
          FORGTN SOLD1ER - xbox gamer

          Comment


          • #20
            Originally posted by propellerhead View Post
            Newbie question: What's wrong with a wireless router? What's the advantage of going wired when everything is going wireless?
            To me it is all about reliability and performance.

            Performance: Network cabling at this point is going to be many times faster than any wireless. Depending on what you're doing, this maybe critical. I've never had luck continuously transferring huge files over wireless either. Also, dependent on the amount of users per AP performance continuously degrades as well. Users can also = devices - A lot of consumer APs simply were not designed to run 10+ devices that is not all that uncommon in a modern home (TVs, consoles, phones, laptops, PCs and so on). If all these devices are active at once on the cheap APs, there is going to be at least SOME decrease in service.

            Also consider that a lot of houses have 30+ Mbps download speeds. So, maxed internet, large files transfers, streaming video/audio and other misc network usage on JUST a single AP is going to decrease the user experience on all aspects.

            Reliability: If you fart wrong there are glitches and other factors that degrade wireless signals. I consider it mostly unreliable for mission critical tasks. (Mission critical for a home network could simply be transferring porn from point a to point b. )

            Consumer APs are notorious for "going down" too and needing to be power cycles or whatever. Wired never has any of these issues.

            There is the security side as well, but I don't think that's a factor for this discussion.

            I run wired and wireless (3 APs) and wireless has it's place in corporate/SOHO and residential. Also, if you're a light internet user in a <1500 sq ft place - it MAY be okay then too with a small internet pipe.

            However, there is just no replacement for a physical ethernet connection at this point in time. I recommend using it whenever possible since it decreases headaches overall for an intermediate to complex home network.
            Originally posted by MR EDD
            U defend him who use's racial slurs like hes drinking water.

            Comment


            • #21
              Originally posted by propellerhead View Post
              Newbie question: What's wrong with a wireless router? What's the advantage of going wired when everything is going wireless?
              More reliable connection, and generally faster.
              Im not 100% sure in my thinking, but it makes sense. It has to take longer to convert and transmit from wired to wireless than wired to wired.

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              • #22
                Originally posted by ceyko View Post
                To me it is all about reliability and performance.....
                I get the reliability and performance concerns and totally understand it in a small office environment. In my case though, my gf and I have more wireless only devices (iPhones, iPads, Kindles, etc.) than devices that can do Ethernet. We have two desktops that will eventually get replaced with laptops when they die. I'm not actively pursuing it but I can see our household being purely wireless networking.

                I will look into stringing some Cat 5 when we build our next house though. I'd like to put multiple wireless APs so we can get a strong wifi signal anywhere in the house whether its upstairs, downstairs, in the garage, out on the patio, in the garden, by the pool, and so on.

                Thanks!
                Last edited by Leah; Yesterday at 10:18 PM.

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                • #23
                  We use a lot of wifi but I have blu ray players and xboxes hardwired. I ran one drop to every room and in several rooms multiple locations.

                  Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I317 using Tapatalk 2
                  2015 F250 Platinum

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                  • #24
                    Originally posted by propellerhead View Post
                    I get the reliability and performance concerns and totally understand it in a small office environment. In my case though, my gf and I have more wireless only devices (iPhones, iPads, Kindles, etc.) than devices that can do Ethernet. We have two desktops that will eventually get replaced with laptops when they die. I'm not actively pursuing it but I can see our household being purely wireless networking.

                    I will look into stringing some Cat 5 when we build our next house though. I'd like to put multiple wireless APs so we can get a strong wifi signal anywhere in the house whether its upstairs, downstairs, in the garage, out on the patio, in the garden, by the pool, and so on.

                    Thanks!
                    That alone is enough to run cabling too. I run 3 APs too, soon to be 4. You don't want to use repeaters...etc...etc. Fileservers and such should be hardwired too.

                    Just be sure to not have overlapping channels...etc...etc More APs does not mean better performance if not planned out a little.
                    Originally posted by MR EDD
                    U defend him who use's racial slurs like hes drinking water.

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Originally posted by brandon01rt View Post
                      Buy 2 boxes of cat 5e. If you are doing 2 pulls per location, it will make it easier to pull both home runs at the same time.
                      House aint that big....and I know how to add a pull string to pull the 2nd wire

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                      • #26
                        where I have tv's I ran 5 drops. TV, cable box, AVR, and 2 game consoles. Even the bedrooms have TV, cable box, blu-ray player.

                        I also ran 4 different colors. Two blues, yellow, orange, green. All cable boxes use Yellow, blue is for game/blu-ray, then orange and green whatever.

                        Everything wires up to two rack mounted 24port gigabit switches on a large rack mounted UPS that is shared with my modem and Netgear AC router. So much less headaches then dealing with wireless.
                        "No free man shall ever be debarred the use of arms. The strongest reason for the people to retain the right to keep and bear arms is, as a last resort, to protect themselves against tyranny in government"

                        -- Thomas Jefferson, 1 Thomas Jefferson Papers, 334

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                        • #27
                          Originally posted by ceyko View Post
                          That alone is enough to run cabling too. I run 3 APs too, soon to be 4. You don't want to use repeaters...etc...etc. Fileservers and such should be hardwired too.

                          Just be sure to not have overlapping channels...etc...etc More APs does not mean better performance if not planned out a little.
                          PM me your email. I need a little guidance on AP vs. repeater.
                          Last edited by Leah; Yesterday at 10:18 PM.

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Originally posted by propellerhead View Post
                            PM me your email. I need a little guidance on AP vs. repeater.
                            An AP just spreads the current signal wherever you want it to go. A repeater actually boosts that signal while spreading it where you want it to go. You can only take a signal so far till you lose signal strength, therefore a repeater is necessary.



                            Read this article, it'll help you better understand it.

                            A network repeater is a device used to expand the boundaries of a wired or wireless network. Easy to install, a network repeater...
                            Originally posted by Jester
                            Every time you see the fucking guy....show him your fucking dick.. Just whip out your hawg and wiggle it in his direction, put it away, call him a fuckin meatgazer, shoot him the bird and go inside.
                            He will spend the rest of the day wondering if he is gay.
                            Originally posted by Denny
                            What the fuck ever, you fucking fragile faggot.
                            FORGTN SOLD1ER - xbox gamer

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              The downside to repeaters is the loss of bandwidth...

                              Guidelines for Repeaters (Via cisco.com)
                              Follow these guidelines when configuring repeater access points:
                              • Use repeaters to serve client devices that do not require high throughput. Repeaters extend the
                              coverage area of your wireless LAN, but they drastically reduce throughput


                              Think of the old half duplex, shared collision domain networks. Except the access is shared over the same wireless channel - not a physical network segment.
                              Originally posted by MR EDD
                              U defend him who use's racial slurs like hes drinking water.

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                Just for the record, I'm not a wireless expert. I can dive a little further into channels and frequencies - but much past that I'll start getting into things I'm not 100% sure on.

                                I started down a wireless path awhile ago, until I figured out someone has to hang the 50, 100, 1000 or whatever amount of APs a customer buys.
                                Originally posted by MR EDD
                                U defend him who use's racial slurs like hes drinking water.

                                Comment

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