LawnGuyLandSparky said:
It is done correctly, I've personally seen it done correctly hundreds of thousands of times by "non-specialists." Daisy chaining a POTS line in a residence is not an incorrect method of installing telephone jacks. In fact, Verizon does it all the time. [/i]
Well, therein lies the problem. Verizon no longer hires qualified technicians and hasn't done so in years. They hire entry-level duds and train them in the most basic concept of parallel circuits and leave it at that. They slap in whatever bare minimum that they can to get out of there. Since they are a regulated utility, they get away with it. Thirty day warranty and nobody can afford to dispute them.
Yes, prior to the advent of sophisticated services such as FSK signaling (call waiting caller ID) and DSL service, and when the very thought of a second line was a luxury, then yes, looped wiring was adequate. That was also when there was one phone in the kitchen and maybe one in the parent's room. If you were a real maverick, you had a "bootleg" extension in the basement that the telco didn't know about that was rigged up with speaker wire. It's not that simple anymore and hasn't been for a long time.
Daisy chaining IS incorrect by today's standards. If you see it being done, then that's great. I also see people burying extension cords to wire their post light, but that doesn't make it right. I see people putting 30 amp breakers on 15 amp circuits, but that doesn't make it right. EIA/TIA sets the standards for proper voice and data network wiring, but nobody is out there enforcing their rules like the NEC does for other electrical work.
LawnGuyLandSparky said:
The fact that the EC in the OP's story stubbed 2 "data loops" and the telcos to the exterior of the home tells me that neither the HO nor the GC communicated the fact that there was going to be any "system" or hub at all. [/i]
Well, they really don't even make hubs anymore so I doubt that conversation would ever even take place. Today's hardware is referred to as "switches", with individual ports for each connected station (outlet). How can you connect computers to the Internet without a dial-up, cable or DSL modem AND a router at the point of origin of the individual cables? It can't be done. Are you implying that they should hang them on the outside of the house? Something tells me that I may have already answered my own question here.
I think that the overall gist of this entire thread is to state if you know what you are doing, then do it, do it well and get paid for it accordingly. If you don't know what you are doing, then don't do it and let someone who knows what they are doing take care of it. I don't see the harm in that line of thinking.