Channel Plus 8051 User Manual

Page 4

Advertising
background image

How to wire a new house

The Internet, multiple phone lines, cable television, satellite systems,
and high speed data links are bringing more and more information to
your home.

The communication wiring in most houses is

overwhelmed by these requirements.

It doesn’t have to be that way.

During construction, providing modern cabling is surprisingly
inexpensive.

When wiring a new house:

Standard:
1 Cat-5
1 RG-6
3 RG-6
2 Cat-5
1 RG-6
2 RG-6

Options … to the above, add any or all of the following:
1 Cat-5
2 RG-6
1 RG-6

1 Cat-5

1 RG-6

The ultimate … where cost is no object, solution:

1) Establish a distribution point for all data, telephone and coax cables.
2) When possible, have a network enclosure at this location.
3) Run cables from each wall outlet back to the network enclosure. This is called ‘home

run ’ or ‘star’ wiring.

4) When in doubt, add the extra wires. When a house is being built, running extra cables

is easy. Once the wall board is up, that extra cable will cost 10 times as much.

Determine the wiring scheme that is right for you:

cable to all possible telephone and computer modem locations.

coax to all possible TV locations (except the media niche).

coax cables to the media niche (to satellite receiver, to TV, from modulator).

cables to telephone company entry location.

coax cable to CATV entry point (2 if you have a dual coax cable.)

coax cables to location of satellite dish.

cable to all computer or printer locations for a home network.

coax to all TV locations for modulator inputs or satellite feed.

coax +

cable to front door for CCTV camera and DoorTel intercom.

coax and bell wire to any other possible CCTV camera locations (swimming

pool, side yard, driveway.)

Conduit to all locations. Remember to install pull cords in conduit.

nd

Run all wires to a network enclosure. In a typical
house, an in-wall cabinet located at the media center
will be a good choice. (Large houses may need two or
more cabinets to service all of the wires. Since these
large cabinets can be unsightly, they are usually
placed in a garage, basement, or service room.)

Phone lines
from Telco

Coax from
cable company

Utility access
cabinet

‘Home-run’ CAT-5 and coax
cables from each location

1 RG-6 and 1 Cat-5
to front door for
intercom and
camera.

2 RG-6 to location
of satellite dish

Master suite

Phone only

Typical wallplates

TV only

Family room

Media center

Kitchen

Bedroom

Bedroom

Living room

Home office

Home office wallplate has
4 telephone lines, data
line, & CATV

Wallplates

8072 - 2 holes
8074 - 4 holes
8078 - 8 holes, dbl gang
8060 - 2 holes Decora

Jacks

8010 - 6 conductor RJ-25 white
8011 - 6 conductor RJ-25 gray
8013 - 8 conductor RJ-45 blue
8030 - F connector white
8031 - F connector gray
8040 - blank white

Consult the ChannelPlus dealer catalog for other wallplate and connector options.

How to wire a new house

The Internet, multiple phone lines, cable television, satellite systems,
and high speed data links are bringing more and more information to
your home.

The communication wiring in most houses is

overwhelmed by these requirements.

It doesn’t have to be that way.

During construction, providing modern cabling is surprisingly
inexpensive.

When wiring a new house:

Standard:
1 Cat-5
1 RG-6
3 RG-6
2 Cat-5
1 RG-6
2 RG-6

Options … to the above, add any or all of the following:
1 Cat-5
2 RG-6
1 RG-6

1 Cat-5

1 RG-6

The ultimate … where cost is no object, solution:

1) Establish a distribution point for all data, telephone and coax cables.
2) When possible, have a network enclosure at this location.
3) Run cables from each wall outlet back to the network enclosure. This is called ‘home

run ’ or ‘star’ wiring.

4) When in doubt, add the extra wires. When a house is being built, running extra cables

is easy. Once the wall board is up, that extra cable will cost 10 times as much.

Determine the wiring scheme that is right for you:

cable to all possible telephone and computer modem locations.

coax to all possible TV locations (except the media niche).

coax cables to the media niche (to satellite receiver, to TV, from modulator).

cables to telephone company entry location.

coax cable to CATV entry point (2 if you have a dual coax cable.)

coax cables to location of satellite dish.

cable to all computer or printer locations for a home network.

coax to all TV locations for modulator inputs or satellite feed.

coax +

cable to front door for CCTV camera and DoorTel intercom.

coax and bell wire to any other possible CCTV camera locations (swimming

pool, side yard, driveway.)

Conduit to all locations. Remember to install pull cords in conduit.

nd

Run all wires to a network enclosure. In a typical
house, an in-wall cabinet located at the media center
will be a good choice. (Large houses may need two or
more cabinets to service all of the wires. Since these
large cabinets can be unsightly, they are usually
placed in a garage, basement, or service room.)

Phone lines
from Telco

Coax from
cable company

Utility access
cabinet

‘Home-run’ CAT-5 and coax
cables from each location

1 RG-6 and 1 Cat-5
to front door for
intercom and
camera.

2 RG-6 to location
of satellite dish

Master suite

Phone only

Typical wallplates

TV only

Family room

Media center

Kitchen

Bedroom

Bedroom

Living room

Home office

Home office wallplate has
4 telephone lines, data
line, & CATV

Wallplates

8072 - 2 holes
8074 - 4 holes
8078 - 8 holes, dbl gang
8060 - 2 holes Decora

Jacks

8010 - 6 conductor RJ-25 white
8011 - 6 conductor RJ-25 gray
8013 - 8 conductor RJ-45 blue
8030 - F connector white
8031 - F connector gray
8040 - blank white

Consult the ChannelPlus dealer catalog for other wallplate and connector options.

Advertising
This manual is related to the following products: