02-05-2007, 14:18 | #11 |
I'm going for a scuttle...
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 2,021
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One day I might sneak into the apps room with a camera and take some photos of the cabling in there.
LAN, power and audio in one teeny room makes for hell. Oh and there is some lovely Krone in there too. The distances involved make for some interesting cabling - there are two monitors in the studio but VGA isnt good enough over the required distance... so there is a box that splits each individual core of VGA into 15 seperate BNC connections, for 30 coaxial cables to be fed through to the studio and reassembled. Then there is the audio patch bay, allowing the output from pretty much anything in the whole place to be piped to anywhere else. no small amount of cabling involved there! I might measure the trunks of cable next time I am down there, pretty sure that they come to about 10" thick... none of it labelled. |
02-05-2007, 14:34 | #12 |
The Stig
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Swad!
Posts: 10,713
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Pity the poor bastard that ever has top change or troubleshoot that lot!
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apt-get moo |
02-05-2007, 14:46 | #13 | |
BBx woz 'ere :P
Join Date: Jan 1970
Posts: 2,147,487,208
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Quote:
I once made one of our engineers redo it all from scratch - I arrived and it was absolutely dire. I told him, "you didn't do it like I asked you to", he just replied with something like "I presumed this would have been good enough....", I said can you unplug the port-side front serial server for me please - he didn't know which cable it was - that proved my point I think (unfortunately I've had to do it a few times... ah well they'll learn - the hard way ) Anyway it was almost shooting myself in the foot as I had to stay there the weekend to make sure everything was working properly - but to his credit he did it, and did it VERY well.
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02-05-2007, 14:50 | #14 |
Stan, Stan the FLASHER MAN!
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: In bed with your sister
Posts: 5,483
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I'm afraid mine makes Martin's look like a professional job
This is underneath my desk in the living room: Not too bad, I hear you say? - The next picture is from beside the desk: Next - underneath the desk in my bedroom: And finally, the two nekkid Folding rigs in the bedroom: I keep meaning to tidy it all up but it's no small task as I'm sure you'll agree. If I was setting it all up from scratch, it would be a lot tidier but this has been added too as the farm has grown and has now got a bit out of hand. I've just, this minute, got word that I'm off to Egypt on Sunday so I have 3 days. I may set upon it one of those days and post pics if I get it looking better. Stan
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Just because I have a short attention span doesn't mean I... |
02-05-2007, 14:52 | #15 |
Do you want to hide in my box?
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 14,941
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Take out the naked rigs and that's what most of my cable arrangement in Swansea looks like
I am planning to sort it though when my room gets revamped, that and hopefully be going wireless for the network which will help.
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Halycopter |
02-05-2007, 17:02 | #16 |
Preparing more tumbleweed
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Hawaii
Posts: 6,038
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Mine is a mess in the house around my PC. Too many silly length cables (KVM ones are the biggest mess)
At work I'm anal about cabling, as are the entirety of NOC and the Data Centre manager. If he spots bad cabling the guilty engineer has to arrange down time with the customer so they can re-do it neatly. My old boss at the college was anal too, all cables neatly run and cable tied together in groups. I could walk into one of the distribution points and follow a cable through from one point to another in under 30 seconds, a very simple case of eyeballing it from one end to the other, with a guiding hand on the cluster of cables.
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Mal: Define "interesting"? Wash: "Oh, God, oh, God, we're all gonna die"? |
02-05-2007, 19:07 | #17 |
Moonshine
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Chelmsford, innit!
Posts: 3,979
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In my old-old job part of the work was to do the original wiring for machines - and they were then removed to make the loom pattern from. So they had to be pukka. The funny thing was the people making the looms (the easy bit) were all ex-marconi wirepersons, and I just dived in and made it up as I went along. VERY VERY rewarding when it all works
And a flaming nightmare when it all goes pear |
04-05-2007, 23:15 | #18 | |
Magners
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 2,865
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STOPIT!!!! Bad cabling practice makes baby Jesus cry!
When I used to do cabling in C&E, it had to be done to CCN30 Standard, which involved making a note of what switch was connected to what port, the mac address of the pc connected to it, the port number at the desk and the serial number of the cable going from the desk to the wall port and the serial number of the cable going from the switch to the patch panel. There was no unpatching, just disabling of network ports. Cabling from wall port to desktop - Grey Cabling from switch to server - Blue Cabling for telephony - Yellow Thats the unwritten law!
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04-05-2007, 23:39 | #19 |
Preparing more tumbleweed
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Hawaii
Posts: 6,038
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Interesting.. at the college we ran on a few simple rules, at both the main room and at the distribution hubs.
Workstations - Red Cable Printers - Blue Cables Crossover cables - Yellow
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Mal: Define "interesting"? Wash: "Oh, God, oh, God, we're all gonna die"? |
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