Hi all, I’m trying to run a Ethernet cable to my home office in a house built in the 60s. This connection is unlabeled and I’m not sure what it is. Can I somehow replace it with an Ethernet cable? I’m new to all of this and did some poking around in the sub but I’m not really sure what I’m looking at or what I’m in for. I don’t have any coaxial cables that I can utilize (unless they are hidden behind a wall? Any easy way to find those?). Thank you.

  • DogManDan75@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    25 pair Cat3 wire typically used on business RJ66 blocks for distributing phones. This case it looks like the possible main feed into the room for several lines. I would recommend replacement to a Cat 6 ethernet wire if at all possible. This will not work for internet purposes are any decent speeds.

  • Longjumping-Horse157@alien.top
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    1 year ago

    It is a “RAT’S NEST” of cat 3 wiring old “pots” wires and wall jack. If the wires in the wall are cat5 you can still use them for Ethernet. But I doubt it.

  • Stone_Monarch@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Well if this was an apartment id say it’s a pretty standard 6 pair riser and DO NOT cut into it cause it’s possibly feeding apartments above.

    But it you’re in a house so someone used 6 pair riser instead of quad or cat5 to run their phone lines. It’s basically only good for POTS and XDSL. You might be able to use it as a cable pull to pull some new cat5, but it’s unlikely.

  • ideliverdt@alien.top
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    1 year ago

    This is unjacketed 6 pair telephone wire. We call this particular type of wire “E Wire”. It’s a type of inside wire used for telephone service in houses and apartments in the 1960s and 70s. It’s probably original to the house. It probably runs through your attic, and dips down to your phone jacks in the walls. Not useful for much except telephone service. Anything more than that will need to be a “home run” from device to device.

    • Souldoubt11555@alien.top
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      1 year ago

      This is correct. Probably daisey chained through the house. If it’s an apt don’t cut it as it may be shared iw. If it’s your house only useful for telephone and dsl.

    • emfiliane@alien.top
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      1 year ago

      I never knew that it had its own name, cool! I just know that I cursed every time I encountered it.

  • radiogramm@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    You’ll probably discover only 1 or 2 pairs were ever used too. Telcos were notorious for putting in ludicrously complicated wiring for what was in reality a simple two wire analog circuit or two.

    Future proofed for stuff that never happened or was just about making it look more complicated to justify the line rental fees.

      • radiogramm@alien.topB
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        1 year ago

        Well, there was an element of that involved, but they also tended to just throw tons of spare pairs in with an idea that some future tech might use them. At the time PCM based circuit switched data was being developed and envisioned to launch as some point. It would ultimately launch as ISDN in the 1980s.

        Local ISDN S-Bus wiring usually ran with two pairs and an additional two pairs for power. It was rarely deployed in homes, other than in a few European countries, but it (or proprietary versions of it) were commonly used for office telephone systems.

        Rapid advances in multiplexing in the 90s saw DSL emerge as the most common way of getting fast data into homes and small offices. That only required a single pair and then telcos shifted to fibre to home. So it’s all redundant.

        You’ll see plenty of home phone installations that used CAT3 or even CAT5 in the later days of PSTN with tons of spare pairs.

  • No_Algae_4575@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    That is a telecommunications artifact. You should put a picture frame around it .

    If you do not have a land line phone or a security system you can get rid of it . Just tie a pull string on it when doing the demo work

  • VagileRechauffe@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Looped cat 3. I would just run outdoor rated ethernet on the outside or if you want to get fancy in EMT or liquid tight.