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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

Hi All,

I have run cat 6 cables to all rooms in my house all terminated in a comms cupboard. The BT master socket is in another room and again a cat 6 cable is run from it to the comms cupboard terminated with a BT socket. In the comms cupboard I have terminated all cat 6 cables in a patch panel.

So, the question is how best to I connect the 3 patch panel ports which are connected to phone sockets in rooms to the BT socket. So far I have thought of the following
1. Create patch cables with RJ45 one end and BT socket the other. The connect these into the BT socket via a normal phone splitter
2. Create a 3 way cable by having 3 cables with RJ45 connectors one end and the other ends all soldered together. Then solder this onto a phone cable connected to BT socket
3. I tried looking for a RJ45 splitter (RJ45 version of a normal phone one) but couldn't find one

Neither of which seem ideal. Anyone have any better ideas?

Also, I assume I have to terminate the cable from the BT master socket in a BT socket rather than terminate it in the patch panel?

Thanks in advance for your help

Lee.
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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

On Wednesday, 17 April 2019 20:38:10 UTC+1, wrote:
Also, I assume I have to terminate the cable from the BT master socket
in a BT socket rather than terminate it in the patch panel?


No, terminate the phone line on paralleled RJ45 sockets, eg on your patch panel if you have an spares, or on something like this

https://www.network-cabling.co.uk/st...-modules-p-590

The use RJ45-RJ45 patch leads between the data panel and the phone panel.

On my home patch panel I have 4 phone lines per group of 5 jacks, jacks 1-4 are a single line on the first pair each, and jack 5 has 4 lines using all four pairs. Thus I can take 4 lines to a location only using 1 data line. (And as in the main rooms the jacks are in quads, I can take 16 lines to any one location.)

(They're not BT lines, I do have a number of switchboards.)

Owain

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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

What I did was to fit a second patch panel that had 16 sockets. I wired all the sockets in parallel and ran the cat 5 cable back to the BT master socket.

The idea was to have 16 ethernet sockets all wired as secondary BT sockets.

The first patch panel was wired to all the ethernet wall sockets in the house.

I had a 48 port gigabit switch also in the rack connected to the LAN port of my internet modem.

I have a set of green and a set of white short patch cables.

The green ones were used to patch between the wall sockets and the internet connected gigabit switch ports.

The white ones were used to patch between the wall sockets and the 16 socket BT sockets patch panel.

Incidentally if you wire the phone patch panel as eia/Tia 568b instead of Tia/eia 568a, this will then take on the same wiring convention colours as BT wiring and the phones will just then work without fear of mis-wiring between patch panel and BT master socket. 😀


All I needed then was commonly available RJ45 plug to BT socket adapters where a phone was required to plug into the ethernet socket.

Kenable have them at https://www.kenable.co.uk/en/network...CABEgKS0_D_BwE
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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

P.s. that reminds me, you need to keep an eye on the REN load on the phone line.

BT phone lines can support a REN of 4.

Simply add up all the individual REN numbers of your telephony devices. If t comes to 4 or more, you will need to fit a REN amplifier between the BT master socket and your telephony patch panel.

REN stands for ringer equivalent number.
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Default Phone sockets to patch panel



wrote in message
...
P.s. that reminds me, you need to keep an eye on the REN load on the phone
line.

BT phone lines can support a REN of 4.

Simply add up all the individual REN numbers of your telephony devices. If
t comes to 4 or more, you will need to fit a REN amplifier between the BT
master socket and your telephony patch panel.

REN stands for ringer equivalent number.


Not convinced that that matters anymore with modern electronic phones.

And it makes a lot more sense to use cordless phones
now than fart around with lots of non cordless phones.



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Default Lonely Psychopathic Senile Ozzie Troll Alert!

On Thu, 18 Apr 2019 07:27:57 +1000, cantankerous trolling geezer Rot Speed,
the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again:

Simply add up all the individual REN numbers of your telephony devices. If
t comes to 4 or more, you will need to fit a REN amplifier between the BT
master socket and your telephony patch panel.

REN stands for ringer equivalent number.


Not convinced that that matters anymore


In auto-contradicting mode again, senile Ozzietard? Of COURSE! LOL

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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

On 17/04/2019 20:38, wrote:
Hi All,

I have run cat 6 cables to all rooms in my house all terminated in a
comms cupboard. The BT master socket is in another room and again a
cat 6 cable is run from it to the comms cupboard terminated with a BT
socket. In the comms cupboard I have terminated all cat 6 cables in
a patch panel.

So, the question is how best to I connect the 3 patch panel ports
which are connected to phone sockets in rooms to the BT socket. So
far I have thought of the following 1. Create patch cables with RJ45
one end and BT socket the other. The connect these into the BT
socket via a normal phone splitter 2. Create a 3 way cable by having
3 cables with RJ45 connectors one end and the other ends all soldered
together. Then solder this onto a phone cable connected to BT
socket 3. I tried looking for a RJ45 splitter (RJ45 version of a
normal phone one) but couldn't find one


If you have spare patch panel sockets free, then wire 4 in parallel,
patch three to the other patch sockets you want to connect phones to,
and connect a BT to RJ11/45 to the remaining paralleled socket.

(Note that you can plug a RJ11 into a RJ45 socket - hence a "normal" BT
to RJ11 lead will often be adequate to connect a BT phone socket to a
patch panel)

Neither of which seem ideal. Anyone have any better ideas?


A basic PABX would probably be overkill for three phones, but might be
worth it if you would like to be able to call between extensions, or
want to add a VoIP line to the system, e.g.

https://www.orchidtelecom.com/product/orchid-pbx308/

Also, I assume I have to terminate the cable from the BT master
socket in a BT socket rather than terminate it in the patch panel?


You can get "master" euro modules with BT socket on them, but those are
really designed for use with 2 wire PABX wiring, since they only provide
the ring cap, but not the surge suppressor or test resistor that you
have the main master.


--
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John.

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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

Thanks very much all this was exactly what I was after but couldn't think of a way of achieving it. So, just so I can apply the various comments to my situation is this correct?

1. I have wired all my sockets up using 568B so sounds like at the face plate, when I need to have a phone line I just need the RJ45 to BT adapter Steph (sorry can't see full name) suggests above
2. I wire all faceplate sockets (including those that will be phones) to the patch panels
3. I wire the cat 6 cable that is wired into my master socket into the patch panel directly rather than to another BT socket
4. Set up 3 ports on the patch panel wired in parallel (i.e. punch a long wire connecting all same colours together - e.g. same brown wire punched into brown of all 3 ports). 1 for the master and one each for the 2 phones we have
5. Patch whichever face plate ports I want to activate as a phone to one of the ports set up in set (4).

Would this work?

thanks

Lee.


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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

Thanks Steve. Looks good but I have some spare ports on my patch panel so if the above would work might be a neater solution for my scenario
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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

On 18/04/2019 10:43, wrote:

Thanks very much all this was exactly what I was after but couldn't
think of a way of achieving it. So, just so I can apply the various
comments to my situation is this correct?

1. I have wired all my sockets up using 568B so sounds like at the
face plate, when I need to have a phone line I just need the RJ45 to
BT adapter Steph (sorry can't see full name) suggests above


Typically (analogue) phone wiring on a structured cabling system just
uses the middle two contacts on the connector. The actual wiring
standard used does not really matter, so long as they are connected to a
pair, and they get to the far end! (and the centre pair are typically
carried by the blue wires on CAT5/6 - and those are the same in both
TIA-568 A and B anyway).

So you need to wire a patch lead with the outer two populated pins on
the BT plug (pins 2 and 5), to the centre two on the RJ11 / 45

See:

http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php/...ing_the_System

2. I wire
all faceplate sockets (including those that will be phones) to the
patch panels 3.


Yup, wire all sockets the same way - all pins connected between socket
and patch panel. That way you can decide how the socket will be used
later, and change the use as well should the need arise.

I wire the cat 6 cable that is wired into my master
socket into the patch panel directly rather than to another BT
socket


Is this the incoming line we are discussing? If so that still needs to
be in place to provide the line protection and test facilities. You can
wire directly from its extension terminals to your patch lead though if
you want. I would be less keen on wiring a line to the patch permanently.

4. Set up 3 ports on the patch panel wired in parallel (i.e.
punch a long wire connecting all same colours together - e.g. same
brown wire punched into brown of all 3 ports).


Since you can only really use this kind of joining for phone circuits,
so you only need do the blue pair on pins 4 and 5.

See:

http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php/...hone_signa ls

1 for the master and
one each for the 2 phones we have


Yup.

5. Patch whichever face plate ports
I want to activate as a phone to one of the ports set up in set (4).


Yup.

Would this work?


Yup.

You now need a way to connect the phone to the RJ45 socket at the far
end. There are two typical options he

One is to use a Line Adaptor Unit. This provides a BT style socket
connected to a RJ45 plug. It also includes a ring capacitor to provide
the bell wire to phones that need it. (its better to regenerate the bell
wire locally if you need it, rather than pipe it about the wiring, since
its not impedance balanced like the other pair, and is more likely to
pick up noise that can upset broadband speeds).

The second is to simply use a phone lead with a RJ45 plug on the end (or
change the plug for a RJ45) - for many modern phones that don't require
the bell wire this will be fine. A straight through 2 wire lead with
RJ11 on both ends (as used by ADSL modems) will work fine with many phones.


--
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John.

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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

Thanks very much John. Almost there. A couple of quick follow-up questions / clarifications inline (hopefully it is readable)

On Thursday, 18 April 2019 12:16:28 UTC+1, John Rumm wrote:


Thanks very much all this was exactly what I was after but couldn't
think of a way of achieving it. So, just so I can apply the various
comments to my situation is this correct?

1. I have wired all my sockets up using 568B so sounds like at the
face plate, when I need to have a phone line I just need the RJ45 to
BT adapter Steph (sorry can't see full name) suggests above


Typically (analogue) phone wiring on a structured cabling system just
uses the middle two contacts on the connector. The actual wiring
standard used does not really matter, so long as they are connected to a
pair, and they get to the far end! (and the centre pair are typically
carried by the blue wires on CAT5/6 - and those are the same in both
TIA-568 A and B anyway).

So you need to wire a patch lead with the outer two populated pins on
the BT plug (pins 2 and 5), to the centre two on the RJ11 / 45

See:

http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php/...ing_the_System


In my scenario, the cat 6 running from the master socket is connected to the extension terminals of the master socket and then wired into a secondary socket at the moment (I believe I have used brown wires and no bell wire to improve broadband). Sounds like I should switch these to the blue wires (does it matter which is which) and then wire the other end into the patch panel as normal. This was if I then use a RJ11 to RJ11 wire at the face plate to connect the phone it should work?

2. I wire
all faceplate sockets (including those that will be phones) to the
patch panels 3.


Yup, wire all sockets the same way - all pins connected between socket
and patch panel. That way you can decide how the socket will be used
later, and change the use as well should the need arise.

I wire the cat 6 cable that is wired into my master
socket into the patch panel directly rather than to another BT
socket


Is this the incoming line we are discussing? If so that still needs to
be in place to provide the line protection and test facilities. You can
wire directly from its extension terminals to your patch lead though if
you want. I would be less keen on wiring a line to the patch permanently.

4. Set up 3 ports on the patch panel wired in parallel (i.e.
punch a long wire connecting all same colours together - e.g. same
brown wire punched into brown of all 3 ports).


Since you can only really use this kind of joining for phone circuits,
so you only need do the blue pair on pins 4 and 5.

See:

http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php/...hone_signa ls


Ah yes good point

1 for the master and
one each for the 2 phones we have


Yup.

5. Patch whichever face plate ports
I want to activate as a phone to one of the ports set up in set (4).


Yup.

Would this work?


Yup.

You now need a way to connect the phone to the RJ45 socket at the far
end. There are two typical options he

One is to use a Line Adaptor Unit. This provides a BT style socket
connected to a RJ45 plug. It also includes a ring capacitor to provide
the bell wire to phones that need it. (its better to regenerate the bell
wire locally if you need it, rather than pipe it about the wiring, since
its not impedance balanced like the other pair, and is more likely to
pick up noise that can upset broadband speeds).

The second is to simply use a phone lead with a RJ45 plug on the end (or
change the plug for a RJ45) - for many modern phones that don't require
the bell wire this will be fine. A straight through 2 wire lead with
RJ11 on both ends (as used by ADSL modems) will work fine with many phones.



Of the 2 "phones" one is actually the alarm panel so is wired directly anyway so for neatness would be better to connect the real phone via RJ11 to RJ11 cable.

--
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John.

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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

On 18/04/2019 12:55, Lee Nowell wrote:
Thanks very much John. Almost there. A couple of quick follow-up
questions / clarifications inline (hopefully it is readable)

On Thursday, 18 April 2019 12:16:28 UTC+1, John Rumm wrote:



See:

http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php/...ing_the_System


In my scenario, the cat 6 running from the master socket is connected
to the extension terminals of the master socket and then wired into a
secondary socket at the moment (I believe I have used brown wires and
no bell wire to improve broadband). Sounds like I should switch
these to the blue wires (does it matter which is which) and then wire
the other end into the patch panel as normal.


The colours used for that application do not matter particularly, so
long as you use both wires of a twisted pair - say brown and brown
stripe or blue and blue stripe. Don't use say blue and green.

This was if I then use
a RJ11 to RJ11 wire at the face plate to connect the phone it should
work?


Yup. Depending on the phone at the end it may not ring if it wants the
bell wire and that has not been recreated somewhere.

4. Set up 3 ports on the patch panel wired in parallel (i.e.
punch a long wire connecting all same colours together - e.g.
same brown wire punched into brown of all 3 ports).


Since you can only really use this kind of joining for phone
circuits, so you only need do the blue pair on pins 4 and 5.

See:

http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php/...hone_signa ls



Ah yes good point

1 for the master and one each for the 2 phones we have


Yup.

5. Patch whichever face plate ports I want to activate as a phone
to one of the ports set up in set (4).


Yup.

Would this work?


Yup.

You now need a way to connect the phone to the RJ45 socket at the
far end. There are two typical options he


Of the 2 "phones" one is actually the alarm panel so is wired
directly anyway so for neatness would be better to connect the real
phone via RJ11 to RJ11 cable.


The alarm panel is very unlikely to need a bell wire anyway, The phone
probably doesn't but you might want to check to be sure. If its happy
without, then a RJ11 to 11 or 45 lead will do fine. If it needs one,
then a LAU will be needed (or open the phone and install a 10uF bi-polar
cap somewhere suitable)




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John.

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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

On 18/04/2019 10:44, Steve Walker wrote:
On 17/04/2019 20:38, wrote:
Hi All,

I have run cat 6 cables to all rooms in my house all terminated in a
comms cupboard.Â* The BT master socket is in another room and again a
cat 6 cable is run from it to the comms cupboard terminated with a BT
socket.Â* In the comms cupboard I have terminated all cat 6 cables in a
patch panel.

So, the question is how best to I connect the 3 patch panel ports
which are connected to phone sockets in rooms to the BT socket.Â* So
far I have thought of the following
1. Create patch cables with RJ45 one end and BT socket the other.Â* The
connect these into the BT socket via a normal phone splitter
2. Create a 3 way cable by having 3 cables with RJ45 connectors one
end and the other ends all soldered together.Â* Then solder this onto a
phone cable connected to BT socket
3. I tried looking for a RJ45 splitter (RJ45 version of a normal phone
one) but couldn't find one

Neither of which seem ideal. Anyone have any better ideas?

Also, I assume I have to terminate the cable from the BT master socket
in a BT socket rather than terminate it in the patch panel?

Thanks in advance for your help

Lee.


How about a BT socket to RJ45 adapter and then
https://www.amazon.co.uk/MagiDeal-Sp.../dp/B076VNM65Y


Shame about the lousy description - it gives the impression that you can
split ethernet with it, when in reality its only of any practical use in
a few limited voice application... something a good few of the reviewers
have obviously not grasped!


--
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John.

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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

Thanks very much John. Sorry if I am being dozy.. at the master I wire in 2 wires (say brown and brown/white) into the extension bit. At the panel and faceplate these will be pins 7 and 8 so when I connect the RJ11 to the face plate I assume 7 and 8 aren't connected or if they are they will need to be wherever the phone thinks they should be?
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On 18/04/2019 17:40, Lee Nowell wrote:

Thanks very much John. Sorry if I am being dozy.. at the master I
wire in 2 wires (say brown and brown/white) into the extension bit.

What is the "extension bit"?

At the panel and faceplate these will be pins 7 and 8 so when I
connect the RJ11 to the face plate I assume 7 and 8 aren't connected
or if they are they will need to be wherever the phone thinks they
should be?


I am not quite following that...

Here is my understanding on what you are trying to get to:

ok so you have wall sockets/hardwired connection to an alarm panel in
the house, wired back to a common patch panel. These are fully wired -
all 8 connections - in cat6?

At the patch panel you have taken 3 unused patch positions and wired
pins 4 & 5 in parallel on all three. So they are wired only to each other.

You have a master phone socket from which you want to connect several
phone points,

So you patch with a BT to RJ11/45 lead from the master socket to one of
the group of three linked sockets in the patch panel. You now use a
regular RF45 to RJ45 patch lead to connect each of those 2 remaining
common phone sockets, to the correct ports on the patch panel to reach
the phone points.

You don't need an extension BT socket in there unless the master is too
far away from the patch panel. In which case you can wire a two wire
connection from the master to the slave using two wires (2 & 5), then
you can connect the extension to the commoned up patch panel sockets
using a BT to RJ11 patch.


--
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John.

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Hi John

That's almost correct. At the master socket, rather than have a BT socket plugged into the end I have the cat 6 wired like this (2nd photo) ie directly into the extension push down connectors on the face of the master socket (currently brown and brown/ white). At the moment there is a BT "slave" socket on the end.

https://www.vmadmin.co.uk/other/357-...tension-socket

The alarm wire is currently run directly from the alarm box to the slave socket. Based on the above plan is to remove slave socket and wire everything in as you suggest. Only question now is which colours I need to connect into the master socket for it all to work. I think it is blue / blue white but not sure
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On 18/04/2019 20:24, Lee Nowell wrote:
Hi John

That's almost correct. At the master socket, rather than have a BT
socket plugged into the end I have the cat 6 wired like this (2nd
photo) ie directly into the extension push down connectors on the
face of the master socket (currently brown and brown/ white). At the
moment there is a BT "slave" socket on the end.

https://www.vmadmin.co.uk/other/357-...tension-socket

The alarm wire is currently run directly from the alarm box to the
slave socket. Based on the above plan is to remove slave socket and
wire everything in as you suggest. Only question now is which colours
I need to connect into the master socket for it all to work. I think
it is blue / blue white but not sure


Blue/blue white would be a common choice - however it does not really
matter, as long as you have the right connections.

Normally the NTE5 style master sockets have a front panel with and IDC
terminal block on the reverse to add extensions to (done like that, so
removing the front panel will "unplug" the extensions for diagnostic
purposes). That block normally has three connection points - with
terminations for A & B wires (aka 2 & 5) and Bell or 3. With that
arrangement you just need a pair of wires in the CAT6 to take the A+B /
2+5 to the slave socket.

You mention broadband, so you might have a master socket with an
integral filter. Some of these sport 5 connections on the back, 2, 5, &
3 filtered, and 2 & 5 unfiltered. You use whichever is appropriate for
where the router is connected. i.e. if its plugged into the master, then
you run all the extensions from the filtered side. If it needs to plug
in elsewhere, then you run the unfiltered pair to just that socket - and
the socket will also need a filter / splitter.





--
Cheers,

John.

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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

You may have spotted a problem in my plan. Rather than have the slave socket I was going to connect directly to he patch panel. So in essence that is a direct connection from the 2 wires the phone needs in the RJ11 to the patch panel,across to the phone bit of the patch panel and then back to the wired end in the master socket. Hence why I was thinking I need to know which pins/ colours the phone would use in the RJ11.

The flaw seems to be that I have forgotten about the broadband router's which also needs to be connected to the patch panel phone connectors. So need some way of splitting filtered Vs unfiltered. At the moment the phones are directly wired into the back of the slave socket and the router connected via one of those filter things in the faceplate. Having now said this it sounds a bit odd. It was something I quickly knocked together to get something working during building works

I assume phone is unfiltered and the modem and alarm are filtered?
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On Thursday, 18 April 2019 21:20:00 UTC+1, Lee Nowell wrote:
I assume phone is unfiltered and the modem and alarm are filtered?


No. The modem is unfiltered. Everything else including the patch panel should be filtered.

Owain



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Lee Nowell wrote:

You may have spotted a problem in my plan. Rather than have the slave
socket I was going to connect directly to he patch panel. So in essence
that is a direct connection from the 2 wires the phone needs in the RJ11
to the patch panel,across to the phone bit of the patch panel and then
back to the wired end in the master socket. Hence why I was thinking I
need to know which pins/ colours the phone would use in the RJ11.

The flaw seems to be that I have forgotten about the broadband router's
which also needs to be connected to the patch panel phone connectors. So
need some way of splitting filtered Vs unfiltered. At the moment the
phones are directly wired into the back of the slave socket and the router
connected via one of those filter things in the faceplate. Having now said
this it sounds a bit odd. It was something I quickly knocked together to
get something working during building works

I assume phone is unfiltered and the modem and alarm are filtered?


No, the phone and alarm should be filtered, and the modem unfiltered.
But note that the separate so-called "filters" you buy consist of normal
telephone plug going directly (unfiltered!) to female RJ11 and via a
low pass filter to a standard telephone socket. If you use the
filtered faceplate the RJ11 on the front is unfiltered and the telephone
sociket on the front goes via a low pass filter. Both connections are
also available as IDC connectors on the back. Possibly you will need
separate runs to the patch panel for each if the modem is not near the
master socket. You can run the unfiltered line to the patch panel and
use plug in filters for the phone and alarm, but this is a waste of the
filtered faceplate and leads to more plugs and sockets than necessary.
You may have to look at the rules for the alarm (rules written by
insurers or alarm companies) as they may demand a hard wired connection
(i.e. no plugs and sockets) from the master socket to the alarm.

--

Roger Hayter
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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

On 18/04/2019 21:19, Lee Nowell wrote:
You may have spotted a problem in my plan. Rather than have the slave
socket I was going to connect directly to he patch panel. So in
essence that is a direct connection from the 2 wires the phone needs
in the RJ11 to the patch panel,across to the phone bit of the patch
panel and then back to the wired end in the master socket. Hence why
I was thinking I need to know which pins/ colours the phone would use
in the RJ11.

The flaw seems to be that I have forgotten about the broadband
router's which also needs to be connected to the patch panel phone
connectors. So need some way of splitting filtered Vs unfiltered. At
the moment the phones are directly wired into the back of the slave
socket and the router connected via one of those filter things in the
faceplate. Having now said this it sounds a bit odd. It was something
I quickly knocked together to get something working during building
works

I assume phone is unfiltered and the modem and alarm are filtered?


No, the broadband router/modem need the unfiltered connection, and
everything else should be filtered.

(Contrary to popular belief the filter is mostly there to stop the audio
side interfering with the data)


--
Cheers,

John.

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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

Amusingly the rest is unfiltered at the moment so might even get a better broadband connection at the end of this. Only thing I can think of is to find a filter with an RJ11 plug on to connect into the line patch and then the filtered connection (ideally RJ11 too) to the phone parallel ports.

Is my logic about worrying about the colours right?


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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

Bit more research. This link

https://superuser.com/questions/6517.../651807#651807

Seems to say that blue + blue/white are the ones as these end up as pins 3 and 4 in the RJ11 and these are the pins the phones use.

I found this filter

https://www.onbuy.com/gb/network-cab...IaAr3bEALw_wcB

Which I could use by plugging into the main line patch and then connecting the filtered side to the phone parallel patches and the unfiltered to the modem (RJ11 modem lead into the rj45 ) not ideal (and expensive) but might work.
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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

What you might be better off doing is to physically move the master BT socket to where the rack cabinet is. You can get the pukka BT cable and jelly connectors off eBay.

You can then buy a surface mount box and an adslnation faceplate from https://www.adslnation.com/products/xte2005.php

This replaces the removable front plate of the BT master socket.

You can then plug your broadband modem into the broadband port and the telephone patch panel can be hard wired to the terminals behind the removable Adslnation faceplate. All phones will then work through one single filter

This is assuming you have power at the location of the patch panels.

I have all the equipment in one location so no boxes or filters all over the house and a lot tidier.
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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

Thanks all. I was rooting around in one of my many cable boxes and stumbled across some RJ11 to BT adapters. So have wired it up using these for now. So I have

Port 1 - wired master socket and using an RJ11 to BT adapter have connected to it the normal ADSL filter. Modem connected to the unfiltered port. Then using a BT to RJ11 adapter connecting the filtered side to the phone ports I wired in parallel.

Phone and alarm are wired into separate ports and then patched across to these. All seems to work fine.

Need a neater solution for the various adapters etc but otherwise it works

Thanks all for your help
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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

On 19/04/2019 11:19, wrote:
What you might be better off doing is to physically move the master BT socket to where the rack cabinet is. You can get the pukka BT cable and jelly connectors off eBay.

You can then buy a surface mount box and an adslnation faceplate from
https://www.adslnation.com/products/xte2005.php

This replaces the removable front plate of the BT master socket.

You can then plug your broadband modem into the broadband port and the telephone patch panel can be hard wired to the terminals behind the removable Adslnation faceplate. All phones will then work through one single filter

This is assuming you have power at the location of the patch panels.

I have all the equipment in one location so no boxes or filters all over the house and a lot tidier.


+1

A good approach IME.


--
Cheers,

John.

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Default Phone sockets to patch panel

On 19/04/2019 12:00, Lee Nowell wrote:
Thanks all. I was rooting around in one of my many cable boxes and stumbled across some RJ11 to BT adapters. So have wired it up using these for now. So I have

Port 1 - wired master socket and using an RJ11 to BT adapter have connected to it the normal ADSL filter. Modem connected to the unfiltered port. Then using a BT to RJ11 adapter connecting the filtered side to the phone ports I wired in parallel.

Phone and alarm are wired into separate ports and then patched across to these. All seems to work fine.

Need a neater solution for the various adapters etc but otherwise it works


A master socket face plate filter is often the way to go. These have the
filter buit in and easy access to filtered and unfiltered on the front:

http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php/...ilterFront.png

Terminals on the back for both filtered and unfiltered extensions:

http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php/...FilterBack.png

Openreach often fit them as standard now, and have a few revisions of
different types :

http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php/...terSockets.png





--
Cheers,

John.

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