Question

Home Wired Network Connection Wall Passthrough?

Asked by: CUTTSLAF

I have 2 adjacent rooms.  I have a Linksys wireless router in one room, but would like to extend "wired" network connectivity to the adjacent room.  I know the easiest thing to do is to drill a hole in the wall and pass the cable through, but that seems so tacky (ok, I've done it many times before), but I was wondering if it was possible to have sort of wall jack that will allow me to plug a patch cable from my router into the wall, and on the opposite side of the wall, can plug into a wall jack knowing that I have a wired connection.

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Asked On
2009-06-21 at 05:16:21ID24509271
Tags

wallplate wall plate walljack passthrough home network wiring

Topics

Miscellaneous Networking

,

Networking Cables

Participating Experts
3
Points
125
Comments
4

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Answers

 

by: pseudocyberPosted on 2009-06-21 at 05:27:08ID: 24677146

Ok, just so we're clear - the quick and easy way is to make a hole and pass through the cable.

The RIGHT way to do it (since you only have ONE cable) would be to buy two wall plates and two jacks.  You can get a short piece of cat5 or 6, cut it to 12" or so, terminate both ends on the jacks (probably 110 punchdown), plug the jacks into the plates, and screw the plates to each side of the wall.  You might need some type of backing plate to screw the plates to - you can get metal ones, or plastic at your nearest home store (like Lowes or Home Depot in the US).

So, now you have two female jacks - one on each side of the wall.  Then you plug your router into one side, and the device on the other side, and it looks nice and professional.

You can get all this stuff at home depot/lowes.  It's going to cost you - probably about $20 bucks.  It's not hard.

Kudos for wanting to do it the right way. :)

 

by: dinopicPosted on 2009-06-21 at 13:05:26ID: 24678446

another way would be to use a couple of these:

http://tinyurl.com/nuoonu

Although a bit more expensive, it's a lot less work and in my book, time = $   ;-)


 

by: kak1004Posted on 2009-06-22 at 01:09:22ID: 24680472

if you know your punching of network devices and have another network cat 5 cable lying around by all means do what pseudocyber said.
it looks nice and looks very professional. if your going to drill a hole in a corner of a room behind a drawer or a desk run the cable and use some wall patch to cover the hole. i would suggest using cat5 covers if its not adjacent room and you would have to run cables from one end of the house to another.

 

by: CUTTSLAFPosted on 2009-06-23 at 17:59:14ID: 24697525

I went to purchase the plates and jacks.  I was curious to see what Radio Shack offered.  While there, I came across couplers which means I did not have to do any punching.  Overall cost was $21 and I have a professional looking pass through jack.  Thanks.

20120131-EE-VQP-002

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