At 03:12 PM 9/20/2005 -0500, Jima wrote: >On Tue, 20 Sep 2005, Chuck Hays wrote: >> I just moved into a new house, and am looking for a wiring panel as a >> termination point for ethernet/coax wiring throughout the house. Does >> anyone have any recommendations? Any local suppliers? > > No particular brand recommendations, but Graybar may be a good place to >go. They've got a couple locations in town. > >http://www.graybar.com/ Home Depot carries Leviton structured wiring kits but they're overpriced for what you get in my opinion, as I'd rather use industry standard patch panels. (homedepot.com's electrical -> datacom -> leviton section shows some of these). Home Depot does have decently priced CAT5e (1000' for $56+tax) and I like their Leviton modular QuickPort/keystone jacks, plates, and panels. HD is also a good source for 100' spools of 3/4" blue ENT tubing for about $30 which I use in the wall because initially I may not know how many or which types of cables (CAT5e and/or RG6 coax and/or fibre-optic, etc.) I'll want later. ENT in the walls in conjunction with a metal fish tape does wonders in making it easy to install new or replace in wall wiring. MicroCenter in Saint Louis Park (on Hwy 100) is also a possible source for standard 19" patch panels. For a home project, I ordered the Leviton 19" panels and 4U wall mount racks I needed via eBay. I've also done business with Cassidy in Minneapolis (http://www.cassidysales.com/ ) as a local source for Leviton patch panels (they carry other datacom supplies as well). Cassidy's building is quite close to one of the Graybar locations. If you've only got a handful of wires to terminate and would like to mix/match your own patch panel, you can get panels that accept Leviton Quickport style jacks in any position, letting you combine RJ-45 and coax jacks together. You could also get Leviton surface mount boxes, a 6 port faceplate for each box, and the appropriate number of modular jacks to create pseudo-6 port patch panels. I see no reason to use RJ-11/12 jacks anywhere anymore as they cost about the same as RJ-45 and are less flexible in terms of future options. -hk