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Chapter Overview

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Pulling Cable Making Connections ... such as concrete pilings and steel girders Safety Considerations and Legal Implications Do not cut, drill through, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter Overview


1
Chapter Overview
  • Pulling Cable
  • Making Connections

2
External Installations
  • An external installation is one in which you use
    prefabricated unshielded twisted-pair (UTP)
    cables and run them from each computer to the
    hub.
  • You do not have to run cables through walls or
    ceilings, attach connectors to bulk cable, or
    purchase additional hardware.
  • Advantage external installations are portable
    you can coil up the cables and take them with you
    if you have to move the network.
  • Disadvantages
  • Cables are often visible.
  • Obstacles between the pieces of network equipment
    can make running the cable difficult.

3
External Installation Procedure
  • 1. Select the locations for the computers and
    hub.
  • 2. Plan the exact route for each cable from the
    computer to the hub.
  • 3. Measure the entire path of each cable route
    from the computer to the hub.
  • 4. Buy prefabricated cables of the appropriate
    lengths.
  • 5. Lay out the cable loosely for each cable run
    without connecting or securing them.
  • 6. Starting at one end of each cable run, secure
    the cable to the walls, floor, or woodwork,
    working your way to the other end.
  • 7. When the cables are secured, plug one end of
    each cable run into the hub and the other end
    into the computer or other device.

4
Running Cables Next to Walls
5
Running Cables Across Floors
6
Individual Staples
7
Cable Stapler
8
Stapling Cables
  • Stapling cables is the simplest and usually the
    least expensive solution.
  • Do not use the standard square staples used in
    most staple guns they can crush the cable and
    damage the wires.
  • You can use individual staples or a cable holder.
  • Individual staples have a cap at the top that
    simplifies the task of hammering it into the
    wall.
  • A cable holder consists of a semicircular plastic
    sleeve with a wire brad through it.
  • You can also use a staple gun designed
    specifically for cable installations that shoots
    round-headed staples and has an adjustable depth
    setting.
  • Staples should be secured well in the wall but
    should allow the cable to be pulled through them
    freely.
  • If you accidentally pierce the cable sheath with
    a staple, start over with a new cable.

9
A Cable Tie
10
Using Cable Ties
  • Cable ties are loops of plastic or fabric that
    secure to a surface and can hold one or more
    cables.
  • Some cable ties use a nylon hook-and-ratchet
    design and come with an eyelet for nailing the
    tie to a wall.
  • Some cable ties consist of a wider loop of cloth
    or plastic, the ends of which are attached using
    a hook and loop fastener.
  • Cable ties are more visible than staples and are
    more often used to secure bundles of cables in
    place.

11
Raceways
12
Raceways (Cont.)
  • A raceway is a small, enclosed conduit, usually
    made of plastic, that holds cables inside and is
    designed to run along walls.
  • Raceways provide better protection than staples
    or cable ties.
  • Because the raceway completely encloses the
    cables within a rigid housing, the cables are
    protected from bumps and abrasions.
  • Raceways are more expensive and more difficult to
    install than staples or cable ties.
  • Because raceways are rigid, you must purchase
    fittings of exactly the right size and shape.

13
Running Cables Around Doors
14
Running Cables Between Floors
15
Internal Cable Installations
16
Bulk Cable
17
Internal Cable Installation Procedure
  • 1. Select the locations for your computers and
    other network-connected devices and a central,
    protected location for your hubs and patch panel.
  • 2. Plan the cable routes from the patch panel to
    the location of each wall plate or other
    connector.
  • 3. With your spool of bulk cable located at the
    patch panel site, label the lead end of the cable
    with its intended location.
  • 4. Feed the lead end of the bulk cable into the
    ceiling, wall, or floor that you will install it
    in, and then pull the cable to the location of
    the wall plate.
  • 5. Secure the cables along their routes so that
    they cannot shift location or be damaged by other
    people working in the same area.
  • 6. Label the end of the cable with the name of
    the wall plate location and cut the cable from
    the spool. (Never cut an unlabeled cable from the
    spool.)
  • 7. Proceed with the cable connection process.

18
Cable Installation Obstacles
  • Sources of electromagnetic interference that can
    disturb data signals
  • Fire breaks that prevent you from running cable
    down from the ceiling
  • Asbestos insulation
  • Service components such as ventilation ducts and
    light fixtures
  • Structural components, such as concrete pilings
    and steel girders

19
Safety Considerations and Legal Implications
  • Do not cut, drill through, or otherwise disturb a
    structural member of a building without
    consulting someone with full knowledge of the
    consequences.
  • Consider local fire laws and building codes.
  • Violating fire laws and building codes means that
    you, the installer, might be held responsible,
    not only for making the job right later, but also
    for any applicable fines and penalties.
  • If you outsource the cabling job to a contractor,
    your contract should stipulate that the installer
    is responsible for the legality of the
    installation.

20
A Cable Puller
21
A Telepole
22
Cable Installation Tools
  • Ladders
  • A ball of string
  • Prefabricated cable pullers
  • A telepole
  • Yardsticks or flexible nylon rods
  • A tennis ball with one end of a length of string
    taped to it

23
Dropping Cables Vertically
  • Cut a hole in the wall where you will install the
    wall plate.
  • Thread the cable down inside the wall from the
    ceiling.
  • Pull the cable out through the hole.
  • Later, attach the cable to the connector in the
    wall plate, push the excess cable back into the
    wall, and plug the hole by mounting the wall
    plate over it.

24
Using a Fish Tape
25
Pulling Other Cable Types
  • The RG-58 coaxial cable used for thin Ethernet
    networks can be installed internally, but it
    tends not to bend around corners as tightly.
  • Thick Ethernet networks use RG-8 coaxial cable,
    which is nearly half an inch thick and very
    inflexible it is rarely installed internally.
  • The main advantage of thick Ethernet each
    computer uses a separate cable that connects the
    network interface card (NIC) to the main RG-8
    trunk, so only one cable protrudes through the
    wall.
  • Pulling fiber optic cable is roughly similar to
    pulling UTP.
  • The multimode fiber is reasonably flexible.
  • However, the cable must be placed more precisely
    with respect to the bend radius around corners.

26
Two-Computer Networking
  • The simplest local area network (LAN) consists of
    two computers, with network interface adapters
    installed, connected by a single cable.
  • Ethernet hubs provide a vital service by crossing
    over the signals between the transmit and receive
    wires.
  • On a UTP Ethernet network without a hub, the two
    computers can be no more than 100 meters apart,
    because the hub on a standard UTP network
    functions as a repeater.
  • To enable two directly-connected Ethernet
    computers to communicate, you must use a
    crossover cable.

27
RJ-45 Connector Contacts for 10Base-T and
100Base-TX Networks
28
Straight-Through Connections
29
Crossover Connections
30
Connecting External Cables
  • 1. Set up the hub in a central location,
    preferably in a protected area, and connect
    it to a power source.
  • 2. Plug the connector for each cable into one of
    the hubs ports, and push it firmly into the
    socket until it clicks.
  • 3. Make sure that you have a computer that is
    set up and ready to go at the other end of each
    cable.
  • 4. Shut down the computer and plug the network
    cable into the jack provided by the computers
    network interface adapter, making sure that it
    clicks into place.

31
Connecting Internal Cables
  • 1. Connect one end of the cable run to a port in
    a patch panel.
  • 2. Connect the patch panel port to a hub port,
    using a patch cable.
  • 3. Connect the other end of the cable run to a
    port in a wall plate.
  • 4. Mount the wall plate in the wall.
  • 5. Use a patch cable to connect the port in the
    wall plate to the network interface adapter in
    a computer.

32
A Patch Panel
33
Punching Down a Cable
  • 1. Strip some of the insulating sheath off the
    cable end to expose the wires.
  • 2. Separate the twisted-wire pairs at the ends.
  • 3. Strip a small amount of insulation off each
    wire.
  • 4. Insert the wires into the appropriate
    contacts in the jack.
  • 5. Press the bare wire down between the two
    metal contacts that hold it in place.
  • 6. Cut off the excess wire that protrudes past
    the contacts.
  • 7. Repeat this process at both ends for each
    internal cable run.

34
A Punchdown Block Tool
35
The 568A and 568B Wiring Standards
36
Laying Out the Wires
37
A Crimper
38
Making Fiber Optic Connections
  • 1. Strip off the outer sheath from the end of
    the cable.
  • 2. Glue the connector in place, using an epoxy
    adhesive.
  • 3. Allow the adhesive to cure.
  • 4. Polish the protruding core so that the pulses
    of light carried by the cable reach their
    terminus in the best possible condition.

39
Chapter Summary
  • Pulling cable
  • External unshielded twisted pair (UTP) cable
    installations use prefabricated cables to connect
    computers directly to hubs.
  • Internal cable installations use bulk cable,
    which you pull through walls, ceilings, or
    floors.
  • Making connections
  • To connect two computers without a hub, you must
    use a crossover cable connection, which reverses
    the transmit and receive signals.
  • External cables have the connectors attached, and
    you simply plug them into your computers and hubs
    to make the final connections.
  • For internal cables, you must manually attach a
    jack at each end, which becomes part of the wall
    plate or patch panel.
  • The process of attaching a jack is called
    punching down it requires a specialized
    punchdown block tool.
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