Wiring – repurpose this RJ45 setup for phone to run as Ethernet

ethernetinternettelephonewiring

So my home is wired with what I thought looked like Ethernet ports. After trial of plugging in my computer and seeing that the ports weren't working as Ethernet cables, I dug deeper.

The wires that run throughout the house are all cat5e. My router is hooked up in the living room with an Ethernet cable running from the ONT port on the back of it to a port in the wall named 1A. Right next to 1A sits a port named 1B. all of these cables run to a central hub in the master bedroom closet.

after finding this hub I realized that all the Ethernet cables running throughout the house are connected to a telephone line switch. and above that switch is a small white box with AT&T on it that one Ethernet cord is plugged into (I'm guessing that's connected to the port that my router is connected to). If I wanted to run a few of these cords that are connected to the telephone hub as Ethernet to the rooms, is the fix as easy as buying an Ethernet switch, unplugging the cables from the telephone switch and plugging them into the new switch, and connecting the Ethernet switch to the small white box i talked about previously?

Best Answer

For the last couple of decades, many new homes have been wired using UTP cabling because its not significantly more expensive than plain old phone cabling.

So its not uncommon for cat5 and cat6 cable to have only one pair used for a `phone, and the other pairs idle. It will be relatively straightforward to reterminate both ends of each wire.

At the room end, you will need a new faceplate and a new jack for each wire. One jack per cable is correct - ethernet can't be daisy chained like a phone.

There's some cost saving putting a cat5 jack on cat6 wiring, but there's literally no gain putting a cat6 jack on cat5 wires.

At the central point, there should be one run of cable to each remote room. If you don't have this, then someone's done daisy chaining and you need to investigate further.

The wires in the walls should be Solid Core. While it is possible to get plugs for this, the normal best-practice is to terminate the solid core wiring on a patch panel, something like this :

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And then to run short stranded patch cords into your switch or router.

Tools: Crimp for plugs, punch-down tool for jacks, a cable stripper for ethernet. Optionally a tone source tool can help with discovery, and a cheap link tester helps show if any of the individual wires are broken. And the usual screwdrivers etc.

Consumables: wall plates, jacks, one patch panel(the most expensive item), a short stranded patch cable per link, a longer stranded patch cable for use in the remote rooms.

You also need to think how your router can connect to this switch. Its possible to use one link to backfeed the LAN through to a switch at the central point. It may work for you to move the router into the central point, though this can cause issues with wireless ethernet signal strength.

This is all a bit generic, but we can be more specific as you provide more details.