Quote from Sam Morgan:
So this is the problem. I have my router and modem in the laundry room, which is adjacent to my home office. I want to have the rest of the house working on wireless, so the router will remain attached to the modem. I was going to have an ethernet wire (Cat5/6) plugged to the router, run it up the attic and fish it down the office wall (plate would sit behind my desk, which is against the wall - this wall is an exterior wall) and connect it directly to the desktop.
The questions I have are as follows:
1) I'm ok with plugging the ethernet male to the router female. What happens at the plate end? Would I use a female to female coupler (as shown below) at the plate and have the ethernet male plugged to one side of the female-female coupler (from the inside)? This would leave the other female exposed to the outer face of the plate to which I would have another male-male ethernet cable; one end plugged at the plate and the other end going to the desktop. Would this be correct?
2) How do I fish wires up and down the wall (never done it before; handy work inclined
)
3) Cat 5 or Cat 6? Prices are roughly the same.
4) Is this type of connection as good as modem-ethernet-desktop connection?
Thanks.
What the hell's the modem doing in the laundry room????
Do you have TV/ISP cable in your office space?
Do you own the house?
Are you limited to one ISP/TV cable connection, do you have cable outlets in other rooms (office behind the desk?)?
I don't understand not moving the modem or wireless access point.
This could get wordy,,, if you want an outlet/wall plate behind your desk
against an outside wall, then I have to ask, is the outside wall concrete block? or wood studs? If the wall is an outside wall, where's the roof rafters? how much overhang do you have on your roof and what's the pitch. I ask this because you may find yourself laying in 6/8 inches of insulation in a 130 degree Florida attic (this is why... "we don't do this") just inches from the eves without enough room to stand up a drill gun to drill a hole (not good). Vaulted ceilings are another story altogether, fishing wire against a concrete wall can be next to impossible, for many reasons. Can you get under the house, or is it built on a concrete slab (just asking)?
FYI when I ran "hundreds" of feet of cat cable through my house and outbuilding the buzz word was Cat 5e. Some folks will say you may get slower speeds off longer runs of cable but I have a run of over 100 feet and a speedtest on that computer is no different than directly plugged into the modem.