BT phone over CAT5 network
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BT phone over CAT5 network
I'm going round in circles at the moment.
I'm wiring up a home network, I have a normal BT master socket. I have a patch panel wired with cat5e cable to distibute my network around the house.
I know I need an adaptor to connect a BT male plug with an RJ-45 Female socket so I can then move the live phone line around the patch panel as needed. But I cannot work out whether the adaptor needs to be a Full Master Socket with line protection, PABX Master Socket w/o line protection or PABX Slave Socket only. And then at the other end I need an unadaptor to go back from RJ45 to BT. It is sending me slowly mad.
I'm wiring up a home network, I have a normal BT master socket. I have a patch panel wired with cat5e cable to distibute my network around the house.
I know I need an adaptor to connect a BT male plug with an RJ-45 Female socket so I can then move the live phone line around the patch panel as needed. But I cannot work out whether the adaptor needs to be a Full Master Socket with line protection, PABX Master Socket w/o line protection or PABX Slave Socket only. And then at the other end I need an unadaptor to go back from RJ45 to BT. It is sending me slowly mad.
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Daysleeper,
Looks like a big no-no.
Check out the pagr from Maplin Electronics. The Q&A section seems quire explicit on the matter.
http://www.maplin.co.uk/Module.aspx?...sories&doy=6m3
Regards,
Shuttlebus
Looks like a big no-no.
Check out the pagr from Maplin Electronics. The Q&A section seems quire explicit on the matter.
http://www.maplin.co.uk/Module.aspx?...sories&doy=6m3
Regards,
Shuttlebus
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Oh yes you can
And even Maplin sell the bits:
http://www.maplin.co.uk/Module.aspx?...=14&doy=search
CAT5 is just wire are the end of the day, and you only need wire for a telephone system. You should be able to feed the phone into one end of your cabling system, patch it through at the panel, then get the output at the appropriatye socket. Take the output from your master socket.
http://www.maplin.co.uk/Module.aspx?...=14&doy=search
CAT5 is just wire are the end of the day, and you only need wire for a telephone system. You should be able to feed the phone into one end of your cabling system, patch it through at the panel, then get the output at the appropriatye socket. Take the output from your master socket.
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Yes, of course you can do it - virtually all telephone installations in an office environment are done this way, albeit on a larger scale.
Questions to ask ;
1. Is it a bog-standard POTS telephone ? I.e. plain old telephone that can plug straight into a regular BT style socket ?
More than likely YES.
2. Have you got ADSL broadband ?
If so, some thought into where the filter needs to reside will be required.
3. Is your Cat5e cabling fully tested with standard pin-outs ?
The adapters you can purchase are basically intended for 'phone service running over CAT5 from a PABX and associated central patching.
Since you intend to take the 'phone output from the BT Master socket (from the consumer side) you don't need another Master type socket in the setup.
You need an RJ45 to Secondary Socket adapter for the remote RJ45 socket - this is a passive adapter.
There are a number of options for the BT socket end - personally I would be tempted to run a short length of Cat5e from the master socket extension Krone block (if it's of the modern type with the detachable panel) to your own patch panel.
Most important thing it to keep the conductors in parallel - I.e. Pin 2 from the BT socket appears as Pin 2 at the remote end etc etc.
Hope that is of some help.
Questions to ask ;
1. Is it a bog-standard POTS telephone ? I.e. plain old telephone that can plug straight into a regular BT style socket ?
More than likely YES.
2. Have you got ADSL broadband ?
If so, some thought into where the filter needs to reside will be required.
3. Is your Cat5e cabling fully tested with standard pin-outs ?
The adapters you can purchase are basically intended for 'phone service running over CAT5 from a PABX and associated central patching.
Since you intend to take the 'phone output from the BT Master socket (from the consumer side) you don't need another Master type socket in the setup.
You need an RJ45 to Secondary Socket adapter for the remote RJ45 socket - this is a passive adapter.
There are a number of options for the BT socket end - personally I would be tempted to run a short length of Cat5e from the master socket extension Krone block (if it's of the modern type with the detachable panel) to your own patch panel.
Most important thing it to keep the conductors in parallel - I.e. Pin 2 from the BT socket appears as Pin 2 at the remote end etc etc.
Hope that is of some help.
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Hi Can Cat5 ethernet cabling be used for telephone extension cabling? - Colin
A) No, this cannot be used for that purpose.
A) No, this cannot be used for that purpose.
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Daysleeper,
I agree - walked down to the comms cabinet in the office this afternoon and guess what, IT and phones in the same patch panel.
So much for Maplin... maybe they are trying to protect their revenue?
Seems all you need a converter.... (and LL34 seems to have it covered)
Regards,
Shuttlebus
I agree - walked down to the comms cabinet in the office this afternoon and guess what, IT and phones in the same patch panel.
So much for Maplin... maybe they are trying to protect their revenue?
Seems all you need a converter.... (and LL34 seems to have it covered)
Regards,
Shuttlebus