A Tidy, Maintainable Cabinet Wiring Methodology?
mawhin asks: "I've seen a couple of articles highlighting readers' favourite tidy/untidy cabling, and conversations along the lines of 'I always do my cabling *real* tidy' / 'yeah but how can you change stuff when everything is zip tied down'. 'Use velcro not zip ties' is obviously a good tip, but what I'd really like to know is how you all do it. My particular situation involves multiple racks of switches next to racks of patch panels. What methodology would you recommend for installation and ongoing change to ensure that stuff is tidy enough to be able to trace cable; isn't so tight the you can't re-patch without stripping big chunks of cabling out; and the arrangement doesn't inevitably deteriorate?"
...spark plug wire spreaders from the hot rod ricer store. Well you asked! I'm an old gear head, that's what I would use! They look sharp!
There are ways to keep wiring racks tidy but few do it.
Some hints:
Do you mean like these?
Or if you are in a situation where there are already un-labelled cables, use one of these. It's a tone generator and probe. Plug the generator in at your drop, and use the probe to find that cable on your panel. We have one of these that we paid $180 for, but the one on the link is cheaper. We also got a cable tester that also generates tones, so you can put the generator/tester at the drop, go to the panel, locate the cable with the probe, then plug in a receiver from the tester kit and it will tell you the status of the cable. It's just a tester, not a cable certifier. Those are crazy-expensive, and not necessary for my work.
(no affiliation with triangle cables, just the first link I googled)
-- Having a Creationist Museum is like having an Atheist place of worship
Found this a while back:- 1.html
From a Network Wiring Mess to Wiring Nirvana
http://techrepublic.com.com/2300-10879_11-5896894