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Structured Wiring |


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Welcome to the Information Age, where your television is digital, your stereo follows you from room to room. If you're considering home networking, High Definition Television (HDTV), or any of a number of other digital products and services, you need to tune into the new buzz in the electronics industry: structured wiring. This bundle may look like a tangle of copper wire and spun glass cables but what it represents is bandwidth. Structured wiring -- a term that has migrated from the computer world into the world of home electronics -- can feed your home's ever-growing need for information-carrying capacity. Before you know it, you'll be able to connect your laptop to your stove top but in order to take advantage of these innovations, you'll have to start thinking about wiring now. In the good old days of the 1990s, most signals coming into your home were in the form of analog waves. Today most signals are currently sent in a digital form or will be shortly. Digital transmission is the same language that a computer uses to talk to a printer. Given that all electronics are becoming little computers, all of these pieces of equipment are beginning to talk digitally to each other. Once the digital language becomes standard, then the discussion will quickly turn to speed and that is where structured wiring comes in handy. Specifically, a structured wire "bundle" consists of two RG6-Quad shield coaxial cables, two multi-mode fiber optic lines and two Category 5 or 5E or 5plus communication cables. The coaxial cable is the wire that connects our VCR to the television and can carry a variety of digital signals. HDTV and cable modems currently use this wire in your home. Why two of these to each location? To allow information to flow both in and out of your home, for additional information-carrying capacity if needed. The fiber optic lines are actually the coolest "wires" in the bundle. They provide ultra-wide bandwidth (meaning lots of digital stuff can move very quickly) and are more reliable than copper. You don't see a lot of consumer electronics communicating via fiber optic, but as fiber optic prices go down, their popularity will increase. In truth most media systems technologists would prefer that all digital communication happen via fiber; it makes everything work more reliably. The Category 5 communication cable is used for your telephone, fax and computer hookups. A lot of tomorrow's technology will use this wire since it's already in many of our homes. Structured wiring radiates from a central hub in a star pattern through your home's walls so that each outlet or jack has its own run of cable. (The National Electric Code (NEC) requires that it be installed at least six inches away from the electrical wiring already in the walls.) If you are building or renovating, wire your home for the future while the walls are open. Remember: wires are cheap but pulling wires through a finished house is expensive. With that as a motto, have Wissler TV run lots of wires to lots of locations, even if you're not ready to use them all yet. The half-life of modern technology is ever shrinking, so the best you can do is think ahead. Above all, don't let these new developments frighten you. They're actually fairly easy to understand and will be useful in your home in the years to come. |

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Unfinished Structured wiring Box |

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Chad Wissler checking connections in the finished box |








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ENCLOSURE |
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MUSIC DIST. |
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DATA / NETWORKING |
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CAMERA |
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CHANNEL INJECTION |
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TELEPHONE |
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VIDEO DIST. |
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RF AMPLIFICATION |
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RF HUB / VIDEO INJECTOR |

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RACK MOUNTED COMPONENTS CAN BE ADDED TO THE STRUCTURE , GIVING VERSATILITY WITHIN THE NETWORK. |



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CHANNEL INJECTION |


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Think about this !!! If this purchase was going to improve the home, why not add it to the home mortgage? And so, the idea of mortgageable electronics begins to grow in popularity. There are some restrictions on what can qualify for mortgageable electronics. You can't simply go down to the electronics store and send the bill to your bank. "In order for a home theater to qualify, it has to be a dedicated room." "The components have to be integrated, so that they'll still be a part of the house when you're ready to sell it." With the rapid changes in audio and video equipment over the last few years, some people might question the idea of paying 30 years on a piece of equipment that will soon be obsolete. But that's not exactly how it works. "We tell people up front that their equipment will probably be outdated before it breaks down, but it's all completely upgradeable, once it's installed, you can upgrade the individual parts without going through a completely new installation. The main expense will be for the overall theater." I ( Chad Wissler) often work with homeowners to add home theaters to newly built homes. "We work with the builders, but are our own installers." "Obviously, the best time for us to come in is in the framing process before the drywall goes up, but we can also install theater systems in a finished room. In most cases we have dedicated wiring for the theaters; however, we can also use structured wiring for multi-room systems." |