wwwebsurfer All American 10217 Posts user info edit post |
In the living room there are in-wall wires (hdmi, etc.) including 2 ethernet cables that run from a corner of the room up above the hearth where a TV might mount. The problem is none of these wires go to the wiring closet where all other wires converge.
At first I thought this was a fluke, but my coworkers brand new house in Durham has the same setup. Whats the purpose of these wires to nowhere? 4/16/2018 8:28:28 PM |
Jeepin4x4 #Pack9 35774 Posts user info edit post |
They should go to low mounted outlet location that is suitable for a media console, or stand, for your cable box or video game console or some other equipment that would require HDMI direct to the TV. 4/17/2018 8:47:45 AM |
moron All American 34141 Posts user info edit post |
You wouldn't want your HDMI cables going to a closet anyway, most things are IR and it doesn't work through walls.
kinda dumb not to run the ethernet to a central location but that's home builders for you... 4/17/2018 3:12:08 PM |
BigMan157 no u 103354 Posts user info edit post |
the ethernet runs are probably just generic data cable extensions, you can find all sorts of adapters to use with them 4/17/2018 4:02:05 PM |
darkone (\/) (;,,,;) (\/) 11610 Posts user info edit post |
^^ IR repeaters are a thing. 4/17/2018 4:44:14 PM |
robster All American 3545 Posts user info edit post |
HiJack ...
Wiring a basement office (to start with)...
SHould I just go with a 15amp breaker and 15 amp outlets, or go up to 20amp for both? Is there a real need to use 20amp outlets or breaker really?
I assume I have to use 12/2 with a 20amp circuit vs 14/2 4/20/2018 8:13:11 PM |
darkone (\/) (;,,,;) (\/) 11610 Posts user info edit post |
What are you plugging in down there? If you're going the high-end PC route, give it its own 15 amp circuit. If servers, go 240 V. If it's standard office stuff, a single 15 is likely fine. 4/20/2018 8:19:03 PM |
robster All American 3545 Posts user info edit post |
dual monitor, multiple laptops likely, maybe a gaming pc someday...
if I go 20, do I need 20amp outlets too? 4/22/2018 5:32:54 PM |
wwwebsurfer All American 10217 Posts user info edit post |
https://www.nachi.org/forum/attachment.php?attachmentid=18525&d=1202766810
Signs point to no from the home inspector people, but I'm no EE.
Check your devices... if no single outlet/device is requesting 20A of power, you should be good. Especially if you put 2-3 outlets on a run and spread the love around.
Nothing you've listed other than an uber gaming PC would pull a fraction of enough power to worry 15A runs. My 24 inch monitor pulls ~80 watts, most laptop power bricks are rated for 100w or less. Graphics cards are usually the most thirsty thing in a gaming PC, I would guess about 200w for the system + 300w/card.
My UPS reports 405w playing a game for computer, 8 hard drives in NAS, monitor, sound, desk light, router, wifi. 4/22/2018 9:58:01 PM |
darkone (\/) (;,,,;) (\/) 11610 Posts user info edit post |
You have to be in the dual or triple GPU category to even come close to breaking 1000W.
You can put 15 amp outlets on a 20 amps circuit. That's pretty much every kitchen circuit. Also, you have to pull 12 gauge for a 20 amp circuit. 4/23/2018 12:26:26 PM |