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John Galt6
Forward, March
Premium Member
join:2004-09-30
Happy Camp

John Galt6 to TheHox

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to TheHox

Re: Wiring up an apartment building

said by TheHox:

Are any small MT routers 802.3af compliant?

Or what would be a clean/easy way to power 20 of these?

Isn't there any local power immediately adjacent to the location of the new router(s)?
TheHox
join:2012-05-31

TheHox

Member

There is.

My thoughts were to do this via PoE so I can place the router behind the wall, keeping it safe from the college students. As long as it is cost effective and stable. Some runs would be 200ft+ in length

If I have to plug in right at the location I can, was just trying to avoid that. I suppose I could plug in and still have the the unit behind the wall.

I just need a source for some PoE injectors that work with the MT or even a switch that would do it.
jcremin
join:2009-12-22
Siren, WI

jcremin

Member

said by TheHox:

My thoughts were to do this via PoE so I can place the router behind the wall

What about something similar to this: »www.streakwave.com/itemd ··· &eq=&Tp=

A little more expensive, but you don't have to cut a hole in the wall, it has wireless built-in, and would work with a standard POE switch. Might be cheaper models available.

ilikeme
Premium Member
join:2002-08-27
Stafford, TX

ilikeme to TheHox

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to TheHox
said by TheHox:

There is.

My thoughts were to do this via PoE so I can place the router behind the wall, keeping it safe from the college students. As long as it is cost effective and stable. Some runs would be 200ft+ in length

If I have to plug in right at the location I can, was just trying to avoid that. I suppose I could plug in and still have the the unit behind the wall.

I just need a source for some PoE injectors that work with the MT or even a switch that would do it.

I would not recommend placing it behind the wall. If it needs to be accessed it would be a pain, plus it would probably be against local codes. Also, I would recommend at least 20mbps with college students, otherwise you will be receiving a lot of complaints about it being slow. I would recommend some sort of centrally controlled service, not individual router controlled, as they can easily be bypassed.
TheHox
join:2012-05-31

TheHox

Member

Click for full size
I took this picture before everything was finished up. At the moment there is just a plate covering the double gang box, and the wires are inside. (1 home run, 4 to each room)
said by ilikeme:

said by TheHox:

There is.

My thoughts were to do this via PoE so I can place the router behind the wall, keeping it safe from the college students. As long as it is cost effective and stable. Some runs would be 200ft+ in length

If I have to plug in right at the location I can, was just trying to avoid that. I suppose I could plug in and still have the the unit behind the wall.

I just need a source for some PoE injectors that work with the MT or even a switch that would do it.

I would not recommend placing it behind the wall. If it needs to be accessed it would be a pain, plus it would probably be against local codes. Also, I would recommend at least 20mbps with college students, otherwise you will be receiving a lot of complaints about it being slow. I would recommend some sort of centrally controlled service, not individual router controlled, as they can easily be bypassed.

I wouldn't think I would need to physically access it that often, and the rare occasion that I would, taking the 4 screws off the wall cover wouldn't be that bad, compared to having college kids tampering with it. But, I will have to check into the code, you may have a point there.

As per the speed and controlled service, I would have the main router in the IT closet do the QoS/FW/Queues, each router in each room would just get those devices connected and do nothing else.

Rather than allowing every single device say 5mb (thus allowing those with many devices to suck down more BW), I would give each unit/apartment 10-20mbps, and they can figure out how to nicely share it. When one roommate wants to get on XBOX and play a game, he can tell his other roommate to stop downloading porn, so it forces them to share among the room, rather than give every device something tolerable.

ilikeme
Premium Member
join:2002-08-27
Stafford, TX

ilikeme

Premium Member

Good luck with that. My college apartment had a screwed shut planet for accessing the wiring, that didn't stop me from hooking my servers into it.

As for getting them to share that slow of a connection, that will cause more complaints and problems than its worth. My 2 roommates and I personally have a 50mb FIOS fiber connection and it works great. We had 30 before and at times even that would be slow if we were all streaming movies and/or gaming at the same time.

John Galt6
Forward, March
Premium Member
join:2004-09-30
Happy Camp

John Galt6

Premium Member

It's my understanding that this is a free service provided to the tenants of the building.

Inssomniak
The Glitch
Premium Member
join:2005-04-06
Cayuga, ON

Inssomniak to ilikeme

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to ilikeme
said by ilikeme:

As for getting them to share that slow of a connection, that will cause more complaints and problems than its worth. My 2 roommates and I personally have a 50mb FIOS fiber connection and it works great. We had 30 before and at times even that would be slow if we were all streaming movies and/or gaming at the same time.

You are depressing. 6 meg DSL for a family here and it seems plenty fast enough for me.
Inssomniak

Inssomniak to John Galt6

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to John Galt6
said by John Galt6:

It's my understanding that this is a free service provided to the tenants of the building.

If he uses the RB750 as a switch more than anything then there is no benefit to accessing or trying to bypass speed limits. The core RB1200 would do the heavy lifting. In fact the RB250 might be all you need just a switch to connect the 4 rooms.

John Galt6
Forward, March
Premium Member
join:2004-09-30
Happy Camp

John Galt6

Premium Member

said by Inssomniak:

If he uses the RB750 as a switch more than anything then there is no benefit to accessing or trying to bypass speed limits. The core RB1200 would do the heavy lifting. In fact the RB250 might be all you need just a switch to connect the 4 rooms.

Looks like the 250 has POE support also.
TheHox
join:2012-05-31

2 edits

TheHox to Inssomniak

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to Inssomniak
said by Inssomniak:

said by John Galt6:

It's my understanding that this is a free service provided to the tenants of the building.

If he uses the RB750 as a switch more than anything then there is no benefit to accessing or trying to bypass speed limits. The core RB1200 would do the heavy lifting. In fact the RB250 might be all you need just a switch to connect the 4 rooms.

I was just going to use a router and give that router a 10/2.

How would I setup that switch so the users on that switch get a 10/2 connection

ilikeme
Premium Member
join:2002-08-27
Stafford, TX

1 recommendation

ilikeme to Inssomniak

Premium Member

to Inssomniak
said by Inssomniak:

said by ilikeme:

As for getting them to share that slow of a connection, that will cause more complaints and problems than its worth. My 2 roommates and I personally have a 50mb FIOS fiber connection and it works great. We had 30 before and at times even that would be slow if we were all streaming movies and/or gaming at the same time.

You are depressing. 6 meg DSL for a family here and it seems plenty fast enough for me.

How is it depressing? The three of us are film/television majors and constantly uploading and download projects, plus gaming, streaming netflix, etc. Makes the U-Verse VDSL connection at my parents house seem like dial-up when I do work there.
wirelessdog
join:2008-07-15
Queen Anne, MD

wirelessdog

Member

said by ilikeme:

said by Inssomniak:

said by ilikeme:

As for getting them to share that slow of a connection, that will cause more complaints and problems than its worth. My 2 roommates and I personally have a 50mb FIOS fiber connection and it works great. We had 30 before and at times even that would be slow if we were all streaming movies and/or gaming at the same time.

You are depressing. 6 meg DSL for a family here and it seems plenty fast enough for me.

How is it depressing? The three of us are film/television majors and constantly uploading and download projects, plus gaming, streaming netflix, etc. Makes the U-Verse VDSL connection at my parents house seem like dial-up when I do work there.

Your view is skewed which makes you hardly qualified to be part of this discussion.

Inssomniak
The Glitch
Premium Member
join:2005-04-06
Cayuga, ON

Inssomniak to TheHox

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to TheHox
said by TheHox:

said by Inssomniak:

said by John Galt6:

It's my understanding that this is a free service provided to the tenants of the building.

If he uses the RB750 as a switch more than anything then there is no benefit to accessing or trying to bypass speed limits. The core RB1200 would do the heavy lifting. In fact the RB250 might be all you need just a switch to connect the rooms

I was just going to use a router and give that router a 10/2.

How would I setup that switch so the users on that switch get a 10/2 connection

I would limit at the core router. There are many ways to do it. You could do a PCQ for each IP. Or give the port/interface leading to the RB250 switch a max queue of 10/2. Highly recommended because tenants can't bypass limits and all changes are in one spot. You have 20 rooms. I would get a 24 port switch and vlan each apartment. Dhcp at the core, good to go!

ilikeme
Premium Member
join:2002-08-27
Stafford, TX

ilikeme to wirelessdog

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to wirelessdog
Do explain. I am just providing my point of view as a college student who knows quite a lot about networking and what students are using their connections for these days.

John Galt6
Forward, March
Premium Member
join:2004-09-30
Happy Camp

John Galt6

Premium Member

said by ilikeme:

Do explain. I am just providing my point of view as a college student who knows quite a lot about networking and what students are using their connections for these days.

The OP is a former college student that is well aware of the issues.

If you want to continue this off-topic discussion, how about taking it to PMs?
TheHox
join:2012-05-31

TheHox to ilikeme

Member

to ilikeme
Yes, college students would love 30mb, or 50mb fios, or more, so would I. But what we are offering them is free basic internet, just like free basic cable TV, that comes with their lease.

If they want upgraded TV service, or upgraded internet service, they can do so, and pay for it.

From us, they will get 10/2, and that itself is not even guaranteed. We only have a 100/10 connection our self.