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Need help. Home wiring with VOIP

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  • #30046
    Jason
    Guest

    I’ll start by saying I’m not a network professional or anything, but I was thinking of how to run the wires in my house and the following donned on me…is this possible?

    I live in a new home which is fully wired in RJ-45. I have a cable modem, VOIP router and firewall in my basement. Currently, to two active wires which run out of the VOIP router are patched into my phone box distributing throughout the home. My question is, is seeing as though TX/RX functions of an RJ-45 cable for network is only using 2 pair of the 4, can I match the connections throughout my home such that the two wires are comming out of the VOIP box, and 4 more are comming out of the cable modem so that you can plug either a computer OR a phone into any jack? Will this cause any disturbance…or work at all?

    #30047
    Wilson Boyrie
    Guest

    First the disclaimer:
    If you are a purist, one that think that every rule must be followed, do not read.
    If you are interested in testting “what is posible”, the answer is as follows:

    You may run data using only 4 wires out of the eight that normally are on the RJ-45.

    That means that are four wires on the cable that do not get used.
    Those wires are there to balance the capacitance of the cable, in such a way that if you need very high rate of data and the cable is close to 300 feet long (100 meters), you still have the full category 5 specs.

    But if you are the regular Joe, that have a normal need, those wires could be used for:

    1) A second ethernet conection. You open the eight wire cable, connect four wires in one RJ45, and the remaining four wires in a second RJ45.
    You end up with two ethernet segments, or lines, independients of each other.

    2) Or what will make many people roll their eyes. Use the remaining four wires to run phone lines trought the house.
    The fact is that when someone is ringing the line, will be around 100 volts A.C. in a pair adjacent to the ones carring the data .

    Most likely it will degrade some the performance of the data link during the ringing cycle of the phone.
    During normal usage of the phone, I think that you will be hard pressed to see any diference.

    Now if you do not like the answer, i am sorry. I know for a fact that it works most of the time.
    is not waht I do when I could run a new cable, but on some buildings that is not posible.

    Best regards!!!!

    Wilson Boyrie.

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