knalltüte
2020-05-09 22:25:42
- #1
In principle, everything necessary has already been said.
Maybe you're lucky and the cables are in empty conduits where there is still space for a second cable each?
Then pull these through and in the utility room mount all on 2 double sockets (surface mounted) or a mini patch panel (available as 6-port from Telegärtner).
Of course, as already mentioned, disconnect the cable(s) on the ground floor and upper floor from the socket and completely re-terminate them (then properly).
The "fiber modem" presumably has an RJ45 output (copper) that you then connect via patch cable to the connection leading to the ground floor (alternatively upper floor).
Place the actual router (FritzBox or whatever) there, to which usually the telephony is connected (cable or DECT).
Now the second cable would be great, because then you can patch back to the utility room with a LAN connection and from there to the upper floor to connect a WLAN access point.
Maybe you're lucky and the cables are in empty conduits where there is still space for a second cable each?
Then pull these through and in the utility room mount all on 2 double sockets (surface mounted) or a mini patch panel (available as 6-port from Telegärtner).
Of course, as already mentioned, disconnect the cable(s) on the ground floor and upper floor from the socket and completely re-terminate them (then properly).
The "fiber modem" presumably has an RJ45 output (copper) that you then connect via patch cable to the connection leading to the ground floor (alternatively upper floor).
Place the actual router (FritzBox or whatever) there, to which usually the telephony is connected (cable or DECT).
Now the second cable would be great, because then you can patch back to the utility room with a LAN connection and from there to the upper floor to connect a WLAN access point.