Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
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These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
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Posted By: SprocketJust put Cat6a/7 shielded everywhere.
Posted By: SprocketJust because you don't need it now doesn't mean you won't need it tomorrow.
Posted By: JSHarrisLooks pretty neat, especially for new builds,...
Posted By: Sprocket100m ish sounds like a lot but when you add up the strange routes and runs up to the loft and back again it soon mounts up. Plus a small rack and some patch panels (each patch panel connection alone is equivalent to quite a few meters in signal degradation - don't take any chances IMHO).
Posted By: bealersYou have Ethernet in your loft? :)
I shall definitely be running cables, 5e or 6. Wireless can be such a pita, even now.
Posted By: CWattersPosted By: JSHarrisJust spotted this:http://www.rapidonline.com/Cables-Connectors/PE-Power-Ethernet-Socket-Networking-501768" rel="nofollow" >http:////www.rapidonline.com/Cables-Connectors/PE-Power-Ethernet-Socket-Networking-501768">http://www.rapidonline.com/Cables-Connectors/PE-Power-Ethernet-Socket-Networking-501768
Looks pretty neat, especially for new builds, but mighty expensive for what it is.
I think it's more suited to retrofit.
Posted By: pmagowanWhat is the point in Cat5 if you can just use the power lines?
Posted By: pmagowanCat5 might be cheap but you need power-lines anyway so you are getting 2 for 1. I am getting this right, aren't I? The ethernet goes down the same power line that supplies the socket?