I have a technical problem and I could use some advice/direction. I'm not an electrician by trade, but I often do my own wiring for high-performance networking in my home.
I've recently moved into a condo that has Cat5 cable and RJ-45 jacks, but there appears to be only one run daisy-chained to each outlet, even then, only one pair is connected.
From a HO perspective, this configuration is problematic as it can't be used for high-performance networking and additionally, it significantly extends the distance to the CO, limiting my DSL connectivity.
I brought this up with my father, who's a former Telco engineer, and he believes, though has no hard evidence, that the NEC requires that all outlets be run to the home panel.
Is this an actual NEC requirement? If not, are there related requirements?
If this configuration is out of code, I can probably get it corrected under the warranty. If not, I will probably investigate having it done.
I appreciate any suggestions on the matter.
I've recently moved into a condo that has Cat5 cable and RJ-45 jacks, but there appears to be only one run daisy-chained to each outlet, even then, only one pair is connected.
From a HO perspective, this configuration is problematic as it can't be used for high-performance networking and additionally, it significantly extends the distance to the CO, limiting my DSL connectivity.
I brought this up with my father, who's a former Telco engineer, and he believes, though has no hard evidence, that the NEC requires that all outlets be run to the home panel.
Is this an actual NEC requirement? If not, are there related requirements?
If this configuration is out of code, I can probably get it corrected under the warranty. If not, I will probably investigate having it done.
I appreciate any suggestions on the matter.