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DIY Wired Network

January 26th, 2008

My Xbox had a wireless connection to the home network through a wireless network bridge for a while, but somehow the connection was just lacking, especially when I used the thing as an extender for Windows Media Center.  I needed to get a direct connection between my Xbox in the basement  and the home router in the family room, but I wasn’t about to pay someone to install cables in the wall for me.  The family room is right above the TV room in the basement, so I figured it would be pretty easy to rig something up.  First I thought I could just follow the TV cables around, because I when I unscrewed a receptacle in my room, it looked like empty space in the wall.
01_inspiration

It must have been the only one in the house like that.  An unused cable in the basement was pretty tightly-packed.
02_downstairs_cable

There was also a receptacle in the family room that had three cables in it, likely for some old cable system.  There was just no working with it.  The two black cables seemed to go up, while the only cable going down was white.
03_upstairs_cable

Enter a new idea!  We have speakers in the family room that are fed from a stereo in the basement.  Their cables go through holes where the wall and floor meet (hidden by the baseboards), into the ceiling of the basement, and on top of the ceiling tiles of the basement to the stereo.

I knew what to do.
04_drill_bit

Yeah, well my mom drilled the hole, but I could have done it myself! :-P
05_hole_in_floor

So then I fed the cable through the hole . . .
06_cable_in_hole

. . . and then removed some ceiling tiles in the basement and fearlessly dug around for it blindly in the insulation in the top of the basement wall.
07_cable_in_ceiling

Remember the unused black cable I was talking about?  It was at this point that my dad and I discovered that we could find it at the top of the ceiling.  The plan was to attach a string to the end of the black cable where it comes out the wall, pull it out from the top of the ceiling, and then attach the Ethernet cable to the string at the top of the wall and pull the string out from the wall until the Ethernet cable popped through.  Great plan, except that the string came undone halfway through.  After a good 30 minutes of fussing around, trying to make the cable go through the insulation (make the sharp turns that the old cable took down to the hole) we decided on another solution.

I routed the cable along the top of the wall, which would be out of sight when the ceiling tiles were put back into place.
08_cable_along_wall

I brought it down right above the TV.
09_cable_down_wall

It wasn’t the best solution, but it worked!  I hooked the cable up to an old 4-port network hub, and brought one cable to the Xbox, and another one to my dad’s computer, so that he could use a wired connection instead of wireless.
10_cable_plugged_in

Even though my desktop computer’s connection to the network is still wireless, since I made the one segment of the data trail for Media Center wired, the performance of the Xbox as an extender for Windows Media Center has increased noticeably.

This is me excited. :-)


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