ᐅ Number of RJ-45 Wall Sockets ("Network Outlets") – What Makes Sense?

Created on: 27 Nov 2017 21:39
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baumhaus815
Hello everyone,

A week ago, we met with the electrician to plan the electrical installations for our new build. Everything is clear regarding the sockets, switches, and lighting outlets. However, we are still considering the topic of communication outlets.

The situation is as follows: Fiber optic cables are being installed in our new development. We want to take advantage of this, but without having to install and pay for too many (unnecessary) RJ-45 (or even TAE) sockets.

As I understand it, in a three-story single-family house you could basically get by with only four RJ-45 network outlets:
Basement: one for the router
Ground floor: two — 1x telephone; 1x Wi-Fi access point
Upper floor: one for Wi-Fi access point.

This way, all end devices (computers, smartphones, TV) would connect via Wi-Fi without using LAN cables. The telephone connection could also be accessed on the ground floor through one of the four RJ-45 outlets.

So, throughout the whole house, we would only need these four RJ-45 outlets (plus 2 satellite sockets for TV). Telephone sockets could be omitted. We plan to do the wiring with CAT 7 cable. In the long term, the satellite TV sockets could be replaced by Wi-Fi TV, according to the plan.

From your point of view, is this planning reasonable? If so, why is it often recommended to install many more RJ-45 outlets when signals can also be accessed via Wi-Fi?

By the way, a home network with only one network printer or other "smart" applications is not currently planned.

Thanks in advance for your replies!
bon198029 Nov 2017 20:00
Yes, I understand that for some people this is visually a no-go. We find it acceptable; having both signals throughout the entire house balanced by just one base compensates for the appearance...

Wall-mounted alarm system housing with three green glowing LEDs and a tangle of cables underneath.
77.willo29 Nov 2017 21:27
I would separate the DSL modem, switch, and WLAN access points. The first two should go in the basement, and the APs placed near the sockets in the rooms where they are needed. I would not accept anything else in a new build.
RobsonMKK29 Nov 2017 22:20
DECT: Gigaset Go Box, ready

@11ant: Honestly, what you’re saying doesn’t make sense. We used conduit from Fränkische, not something cheap. And? Network signals like Ethernet and satellite only pass through moderately. Anyone who thinks they are replaceable despite the conduit is also believing in unicorns [emoji882]

And having a Fritz Box visible in the living area... absolutely not acceptable.
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hanse987
29 Nov 2017 23:27
RobsonMKK schrieb:

Networks like satellite cables pass through moderately. Anyone who thinks they can still be replaced despite empty conduits is also believing in unicorns [emoji882]

For that, there are pull boxes, and you should avoid making bends too tight.
RobsonMKK29 Nov 2017 23:34
Yes, that’s how “tight” you can make the radius from the raw subfloor to the wall... Theory and reality
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Alex85
30 Nov 2017 13:08
By the way, repeaters are also available for DECT.