This is a really informative video, kudos for going the extra mile and sorry about the extra cost that came with it. It helped giving understanding in Ethernet/IP performance with 1080p.
@wezleyswift40394 жыл бұрын
I've seen a few videos on this subject but this has to be the best for me. Very useful, informative and helpful. Vince I'm glad to call you a mate. 👍🏾
@storungz6 жыл бұрын
wow! who knew all those options are available for HDMI!! Thank you so much! Now my original plan of moving the Mac Mini into the IT vestibule I'm finishing would be feasible without a long ass HDMI cable going through the attic! I literally just watched this video while working on my CAT6 patch panel so HDMI over IP is looking mighty fine! Cheers!
@jessielearned4 жыл бұрын
anyone with google?
@Panaw6 жыл бұрын
Hey I'm in New Zealand and have been pondering on how to get Sky on the other rooms in my house. Watching your vid showing the various options I think I might plump for the HDMI over IP option. Thanks for doing the leg work for the rest us. Thanks mate.
@colintroman99124 жыл бұрын
Excellent, in-depth review. You went to a lot of effort to do this for us and it’s very much appreciated, thank you.
@juliasrodriguez64376 жыл бұрын
Enjoyed the video, i liked the fact that you reviewed more than 1 option for this project. I feel most people would find the WiFi receiver their best choice and then the over-IP box as an alternative option. I will try both and let you know how it goes. Thank you
@nighatibrar91472 жыл бұрын
I have experience in
@g4zzyp6 жыл бұрын
Just wanted to say I love your Videos, keep up the great work. I have a CCTV system and was looking at various ways of how I could transmit the picture to various rooms without running shed loads of cables and this Video really helped. The HDMI Over IP using Powerline seems like the perfect option, you've saved me a lot of time and probably returns etc :)
@mebateman6 жыл бұрын
Great video. I was trying to decide how to accomplish this in my house. After watching the video, I opted for the HDMI over IP. It works flawlessly. Thanks for all of the helpful info. Matt from USA.
@Mymatevince6 жыл бұрын
Thanks Matt :-)
@addmmss4 жыл бұрын
Not really a comment guy but just wanted to say thanks for taking the time to make this. Very informative.
@jkruser5 жыл бұрын
I really appreciate your introduction to the different options and walk-through of the implementation. I have just started to rethink my media room and it has helped me get my head wrapped around what options I have to accomplish what is I want to do.
@joemat003 жыл бұрын
BRILLIANT TUTORIAL! So Thorough. So Detailed. Awesome job Vince.
@alpwalker6 жыл бұрын
Well done Vince for taking the time and expense to try and solve other people’s problems Videos like yours are to be applauded, keep up the good work. I use a different method but unfortunately I’m not as proficient as your goodself at explaining the solution.Thank you.
@Mymatevince6 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the nice comments :-)
@markc8714 жыл бұрын
Fantastic video. Tells me everything I need to make my decision on how to run HDMI multiroom. Thanks for going the extra mile.
@JazzFunkNobby19646 жыл бұрын
I'm living in England 50 years and I never heard of aluminium house wiring. Good video. I'm trying to find an alternative to my laggy chromecast.
@robertcollins75154 жыл бұрын
It's OLD. 1965-1972 In the US. Copper prices were high. Used as an alternative. But connections are bad. Fire issues.
@wassimmerdas812 жыл бұрын
Vince keep making videos Your the best designer ever I appreciate you so much
@nickdvorchak15346 жыл бұрын
I'm in the US, and my house is roughly 20 years old. It was built right before running ethernet was mainstream. My electrical wiring is near perfect with copper wiring that isn't very old, and it all has a good connection in the electrical panel, and to all the outlets and switches. I use the TP-Link AV1000 powerline ethernet adapters, and they work absolutely perfectly. I've never had any disconnections or slow downs. There is times where I max them out, and they just keep on chugging along. If anyone has anything similar to mine, with a little bit of research on powerline networking, that might be the best bet for multi-room HDMI. We plan on doing some major remodeling soon, and plan on running tons of cat 6 cable.
@sygad16 жыл бұрын
fantastic video, enjoyed the simplicity and real world demonstration of each solution. thanks for taking the time to create it
@m.d.f37974 жыл бұрын
I was also thinking of all the option on how to repeat my HDMI to multiple TVs on multiple floor. You showed me a few things I didn't know about. And now I see 1 more option that can be used that you missed. In your video, there was a way you did using HDMI > Ethernet > Powerline I think another way is using the existing WIFI routers and WIFI extenders. Meaning HDMI ethernet transmitter > Wifi Router > Wifi Extender > HDMI ethernet receiver. I am not sure if this is possible before. But after watching how it worked using Powerline. I am pretty confident now that it will also work if you just integrate it into the already existing WIFI network at your home.
@SkyShazad4 жыл бұрын
I know this video is like 2 years old but this is seriously well explained video, awesome job man
@agelikemilk3514 жыл бұрын
Interesting, the hdmi over ip interests me a lot
@jack789464 жыл бұрын
I've got powerline in my room and a spare one I wonder if the IP one would work alongside it with internet 🤔
@Sir.NathanDrake6 жыл бұрын
Just ordered a HSV560 for looking into a remote gaming setup (kvm over ip) Going to use 2 dedicated wireless-n routers for connecting these together. This video helped me decide what hardware to order. Thanks
@Shavinderyt5 жыл бұрын
Wow I saw this video a while ago when I was trying to find out how to do wireless HDMI and I had no idea that a year later I'd find myself glued to this channel for completely different reason by complete accident. It's funny how things work out like that.
@PabloRodriguez-vr6ru4 жыл бұрын
This is great! Thanks for going through all these options and making it clear to understand the setups. Thanks!
@pokute15 жыл бұрын
love your videos vince! learned alot throughout the years, thanks for taking the time to do these
@lilmarshw5 жыл бұрын
amazing video well done. I would like to mention- A HDMI spliter does decrease the single.
@mike4066 жыл бұрын
Just to clarify for viewers - You don’t need to use a network switch with the Mirabox HDMI over IP when just using two endpoints. It supports point to point so you can just hook them up directly together over Ethernet. Using a network switch is necessary for if you want to use one Sender to multiple Receiver units. Just figured I’d clarify this to anyone who wants to use the Mirabox but only between two TVs.
@humamhamze4 жыл бұрын
Man, this is a great video tutorial about wiring, just what i needed as i was going crazy how to setup my stuff inside the house!
@redsmeg746 жыл бұрын
I use a Belkin screencast AV4 wireless HDMI... The don't seem to make these anymore but work very well. I think they were brought to market way to early in HDMI standards and thus didn't sell... got mine on clearance for under $100 AUD
@jasonlittle65424 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video! At our church, I have 5 hdmi over cat6 extenders (different Chinese brand) that work well. However I planned on using 2 more in our gymnasium expansion and I'm running into a signal problem. The hdmi over ip are probably the solution I will use and if needed, setup a vlan to keep the traffic separate.
@bsoundlighting5 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much! This video saved me so much time interns of research. Keep it up
@DrJams Жыл бұрын
Best video I could find on this subject 👍👍
@r5bc6 жыл бұрын
Very good and very complete review. Please keep up the good work
@ford15465 жыл бұрын
in Norway we can have tv via coax or fiber. There is ip tv and we can have several tv tuner boxes and we can run the signal wireless between them if we want
@matastra5 жыл бұрын
I watched this whole video without skipping. What a great video. Answered a lot of questions bar one. Could you have multiple transmitters over into a managed switch with vans to make them separate networks. That would be an awesome video.
@mardyn1535 жыл бұрын
Working with a system at our Church... trying to transmit HDMI signal over Cat5E for 120ish feet.... not having much luck so far, currently only thing I've got working is a low quality VGA signal. Thanks for the good video, it's given me a few ideas to try out. mardyn
@redevladar6 жыл бұрын
Very very well made video. One of the best I've seen in a long time.. One thing though, I just wish that you could have listed the equipment you used in the description with maybe a link to buy them.
@captainkillscreen22726 жыл бұрын
Hi Vince, awesome video, this is the type of stuff i do for fun, really enjoyed watching this, gives me a few options now for the kids rooms!
@NemanjaSimovic4 жыл бұрын
Profound analysis. Great! I like HD extenders most!
@haroldpepete6 жыл бұрын
my respect, excellent job, soonly i starting a unifi video project and your video help me alot, definitely hdmi over ip is my choice, thank again
@dcsh786 жыл бұрын
Neet Cables (on Amazon) have a reasonably priced (~£70) hdmi 4x2 matrix which I have used for a number of years now for viewing in the living room and bedroom, either the same or different sources.
@stuartc19866 жыл бұрын
Hi all I have CCTV on a work yard and looking at putting another monitor in a separate office from the unit (all on the same ring main) what would you think is best using HDMI over poweline?
@Guust_Flater6 жыл бұрын
I have done this in my home, to watch the digital tv box content also in the bedroom. I have the hdmi over IP. Because i go to 1 extra tv i don't need the switch. The ethernetcable goes directly from sender to receiver (not over my lan, like you also adviced). The picture and sound are great and almost no delay. Picture quality is 1080p. Some tips...i use a yamaha receiver which i use as a hdmi switch, so now i can see all my sources on the bedroom tv (PS, tv box, blueray, chromecast......), so if you have a receiver you can save yourself a switch. Some (higher end) receiver have also a hdmi out2, this works as splitter. The source i choose on the receiver will go through hdmi out1 to the livingroom tv. The same signal comes out of hdmi out2. Via a hdmi cable i go to the hdmi sender, then through the ethernetcable to to bedroom, into the hdmi receiver and as last from there via a hdmi cable to bedroom tv. The ifrared also wotks great. But some tv boxes (like i have) have an app for controlling them. So you can buy the cheaper one without IR and still change channels on the tv with your smartphone(app).
@AROAH6 жыл бұрын
It is by no means cheap, but I had a project where I ran HDMI over a couple hundred feet of coax, and it worked surprisingly well. The adapters were about $100US each though.
@mikosoft6 жыл бұрын
As a network engineer that under the stairs locker made my eyes bleed. The review was great though
@mike4066 жыл бұрын
mikosoft Try working on a college campus infrastructure. His looks like nothing compared to that lmao.
@mikosoft6 жыл бұрын
When I was a university student the network on our dorm went through major reconstruction and it went from something like that on the video to a pro looking network. There were 12 sections in that dorm and every one had a nice tidied up rack with switches and neatly ran cables. Even if at that time I didn't yet appreciate it (I didn't choose networking as major yet) I can recall the look of it. But it was a technology university and the dorm was full of nerds so it kinda makes sense.
@mike4066 жыл бұрын
Well since my university was a state funded one with state workers - you can probably imagine how much "care" was put into tidiness in any regard. :P
@mikosoft6 жыл бұрын
Same as my university. But at the dorm the network was ran by a bunch of volunteers who even found a nonprofit to raise money to cover operational costs. Everybody who wanted to be connected had to join the nonprofit and pay a yearly contribution to the nonprofit. It's a very clever system and I'd recommend it in a heartbeat to any such setting. The only downside is there need to be enough volunteers to do the job :D
@nicoleablan4434 жыл бұрын
Look arse hat
@EddieRyce5 жыл бұрын
So just wanted it in full. Fantastic real world review. I had aa sony KDL 40EX1 tv that transmitted the HD picture for a hub to the screen so no tracking of walls (got it in 2010) thenit recently broke due to faulty tcon board, so had a to buy a new TV and of course wireless hd in tv's is not a thing any more. Have bene going back and for the over options especially with the Nyrius device you have (some reviews are not good of it at all). It seems to work flawlessly for you and I only have a distance of 2 meters to content with. The HD over IP interests me especially over powerline adapters. ( I actually sent that actual question to someone on amazon who sells hd over ip devices, just before I came across your review). Thank you
@TKamalpreet6 жыл бұрын
Hey Vince, awesome video. Just wanted to ask what you do as a job? You seem very versed in Networking!
@Mymatevince6 жыл бұрын
Hi there, thank you :-) I used to work as a phone engineer for BT and then telecom/networking sales. I'm just a bit of a cable nerd :-)
@LukeWhitton6 жыл бұрын
Technomate makes really good bits of kit like this these days!
@davidfarrell10626 жыл бұрын
I watched this video because I saw that long hdmi cable you were using. I had 2 of them (15m) and found them to be absolute rubbish. Sent them back. I see you couldnt get them to work either. I had a better quality 20m cable that worked perfectly.
@PH61a2 жыл бұрын
What a video: super informative. I'm impressed!
@guyp35995 жыл бұрын
Great review! I've got Sky HD and I'm gonna do the HDMI over IP with power line. Thanks!
@james107396 жыл бұрын
Ya with that balun good thing you have cat 6 because all the connections like the patch panel and all also every electrical cable it passes by and even heat in your walls would increase resistance
@rainsnow917410 ай бұрын
I know this is old video, but your test with powerline adapter was on a powersurge extension by the looks of it, powerline adaptor does not work well with powersurge protector extensions cables as it causes signal issue within the system which is usually stated in the manual book too, best result is directly into main sockets.
@seanyem6 жыл бұрын
Great videos mate. The Virgin V6 remote is Bluetooth mate
@شیخاحمد-ب7ي5 жыл бұрын
Correct
@fixingmoddingbuilding6 жыл бұрын
just subscribed, i always seem to get linked to your vids anyway! and always enjoy them! going to give the hdmi over ip a go but going through powerline..
@10p66 жыл бұрын
Nice video. One issue with HDMI is not the cable but the wires. HDMI spec calls for the wire lengths to have a difference less than 3mm. So when you take a 30M (30,000mm) cable, the tolerances have to be exact. (0.0001%)
@Mymatevince6 жыл бұрын
Very interesting, thanks for sharing :-)
@darioampuy6 жыл бұрын
if you are going to use it in the same network you need a IGMP switch or router that supports IGMP, and it has to be gigabit because 1080p uses 80Mbps per receiver which will saturate a 100mbps network easilly. most routers has IGMP snooping option in the config but switches doesn't have means to configure and you need to look at their specs to know if they are IGMP capable
@lewis_breaks_everything6 жыл бұрын
The v6 remote uses RF and I have discovered it does continue to work even in another room or floor of the building
@Dizzledale4 жыл бұрын
I would've posted this too but saw your comment. Can confirm.. The Virgin V6 remotes don't need IR line of sight and should work from different rooms in the house. It might be more beneficial not to use IR as you might start controlling the downstairs TV & volume if you're upstairs.. Actually I just saw the end of the video where the remote wasn't working.. Ignore me!
@malakapalipana5 жыл бұрын
That’s 36 mins well spent. Thanks.
@aabidalimulla2496 жыл бұрын
Good work. Very useful information. Thanks.
@jamesread6766 жыл бұрын
Excellent reviews always wondered which are better
@cazenova4 жыл бұрын
Great video and in depth detail on various products👍🏻
@rfitzgerald20044 жыл бұрын
Another option you may want to look at is HDBaseT which again runs over a single cable and in various lengths but commonly 60m. That Technomate device you have there may well be one of them but I couldn't tell from the video. HDBaseT also come in a PoE version where the RX box is powered remotely over the cat6 cable. This is what the rich folks run in their mantions where they have a centralised AV system in a cupboard linked to all the rooms. I myself run HDBaseT for mine and my sons computers, we have the computers in a server rack in a central part of the house and just have HDMI and USB extended to his bedroom and the lounge where mine is. This allows us to keep the box noisy boxes out of sight and just run a tidy looking screen where we need it. I use these ones myself and managed to pick up two sets of them at a car boot sale for £5 a set as the person didn't know what they were or their value, bargain! They're usually around £150 a set brand new I believe. www.pulse-eight.com/p/174/neopro-transmitter-100m-hdbaset Another thing you might like to look at is a HDMI Matrix which allows you to have multiple displays connected to multiple sources and be able to freely switch between the two. You could view one device on two screens, or have separate sources and switch them up as needed so you could even play Xbox from upstairs if the controller range reached. And to combine the two of these options, a HDBaseT Matrix has HDMI inputs, and cat6 outputs, and on the other end just put a HDBaseT receiver. They are big money though, around £1k for a basic model
@RobinBull19682 жыл бұрын
I have a simple HDMI splitter to carry the signal to the kitchen from the adjacent lounge but there's so much lag on the audio that, as you can hear both TV's from both rooms, there is a very noticeable echo. This may be due to different length cables after the splitter, a 2m to the lounge TV and a 10m to the kitchen. I'd be interested to know if the other options you present have similar issues. I'd love to have all four of the TV's in the house synched up with no audio delay/echo. Great video by the way.
@STRETCHBYRNE6 жыл бұрын
Great information video, thanks Vince.
@Onyl186 жыл бұрын
Nice video! I am planning to run my CCTV DVR to send video to multiple TVs but dont know which equipment works with HDMI over IP on 1080p resolution properly, the setup you have via netgear switch is the one I am looking for. Will check how how much the HD extender boxes are here on the other side of the globe. Thanks! :-) P.S. made me curious if the IR feature on the HD extender will work on the DVR too. :-)
@richardmewes80856 жыл бұрын
Great video!!! But isn't the Virgin V6 remote Bluetooth like mine?
@heshanindra5 жыл бұрын
This is great. My system has failed at home - internal Cat5 cabling but the matrix i think has broken. YOur video has given me ideas as to how to bypass this old kit for more up to date kit thanks
@ashishvt4 жыл бұрын
Fantastic, this is really great and detailed information, thank you so much to take time and do this video.
@chrisperrywv4 жыл бұрын
I’m curious if your switches and splitters are effecting the results...
@PrivateSi6 жыл бұрын
The coiled cable won't help but It's a good worst case scenario test.... ahh good, you acknowledged this... Latency would be good to know... Ahh you mentioned lag on the IP solition...
@Haiyami5 жыл бұрын
You should look into HDMI over Fiber. Now that's interesting. Also My Mate VINCE, you should look into HDMI/USB over IP. That transmits both audio/visual and USB data connections.
@Mymatevince5 жыл бұрын
Yes, I like the sound of the HDMI over Fibre, the prices look like they have dropped recently so hopefully once they come down a bit more I can experiment with them :-)
@drdoomslab6 жыл бұрын
Interesting how things progress and change. But i do have to say you where using a few of the other old types of Ethernet extenders wrong when you had them around the house. You said they went thought two patch panels and also they went thought the panels on the walls. Also it goes though a splitter. Many of these devices will create noise in the signal. Some of these devices do not play well to geather at all. Most of these kind of extenders dont like these extras as well as they can not run though any kind of patch panel or even some splitters. And i know this from installing 100's and 100's of these around London. They have to be one unbroken direct connection. On a few jobs we had to compleatly re-run cables for these screens as they where planned for wrong. And much like you said shealded cat-6 cable can help a lot. The IP extenders were the ones we ended up with mostly in the installation business but we had many years of fun of trying to get these other systems working correctly before IP ones came about. Amazing how cheap its all got. Trust me its cheap now. lol. We Also had fiber extenders. They where grate. Worked over 2km's + lol. Super low latency for the distance but super expensive at the same time. Also the fiber and terminating can be expensive and difficult. For simulators though where they needed the latency to be to lowest we used direct connection, no IP ones as they encode. Oh wireless hmm might work for a while but we always have more issues with wireless in the end. Good for quick easy fix. Cheers for the video.
@Mymatevince6 жыл бұрын
Thanks for all the detailed information :-)
@PogoInTheWoods2 жыл бұрын
Great presentation, albeit somewhat dated as of this particular comment. That said, and it may have been covered somewhere else in the previous 511 comments, the Mirabox HDMI over IP is not an IP solution at all and should not be referred to as such. It is a Layer 2 data link protocol switched ethernet solution. There is no IP involved whatsoever.
@mikadoro134 жыл бұрын
The best review so far on hdmi over different cat5/6 extenders. Good job, keep it up! However, could an active female hdmi to female hdmi signal booster, boost the signal enough, right before the cat5 cable devices to have a proper signal over the TV end where you had none? So the setup would be: Output device -> hdmi cable -> HDMI BOOSTER -> (adapter female hdmi to male hdmi) -> hdmi over cat5/6 transmitter -> cat5/6 cable -> hdmi over cat5/6 reciever -> hdmi cable -> TV
@jameswrape67592 жыл бұрын
Excellent explanation. Helps a lot
@DavidLGood6 жыл бұрын
Use two splitters on both ends of the really long HDMI runs to "push" and "pull" the signal. Works pretty good.
@Santoso7396 жыл бұрын
in your video you mentioned that connecting this setup to home internet switch will slow down everything. And you recommended to have unmanaged Ethernet switch. I have a managed L3 64 port switch and want to use it for everything in my home. Did you try that setup with managed SW or different VLANs ? I mean a separate VLAN for video system ? Separate VLAN for each transmitter and receiver ?
@VikasGupta-bx5qv2 жыл бұрын
This would be great for a security system. You could dedicate an HDMI input on each TV to your cameras so you can watch your cameras in any room.
@dannypsimpson5 жыл бұрын
Awesome video. Very well explained. Im planning on setting up a network running PS4 and pc to multiple displays throughout. So this trial has helped. I'm going to go with the hdmi over IP. Am I right then saying that a switch will act as a splitter... Mirroring the image multiple times ? And it all still works going through your main network switch as well in your cupboard. Amazing.
@navidmehdi65 жыл бұрын
you saved me a ton of headach. was planning the powerline method for gaming.
@mikeholmes32032 жыл бұрын
this is very well done, 1 question I would like to add 1 other device. basically my pc will be in the computer room. I would like to run the pc from there and also the bedroom and the living room
@DB_Videos2756 жыл бұрын
Vince your under the stairs cabling is starting to look like Google’s data centre 🤔😂
@Mymatevince6 жыл бұрын
lol :-)
@SelfMadeDocumentary5 жыл бұрын
Great video and well explained.
@Quickblood16 жыл бұрын
Really interesting, although I'm kinda glad that I don't really watch live TV anymore given the costs involved. I just put an Android TV box in each room and stream everything.
@1Patient6 жыл бұрын
I cut my cable probably going on 4 yrs now...only have an internet connection, and like you have either been downloading or streaming content.
@Quickblood16 жыл бұрын
@@1Patient Yeah I know for a lot of folks it's been a conscious decision but for me it just sorta happened over time. I wanna watch things when I'm in the mood for them and some shows are just really dark and depressing & other times I don't want comedy on say a Friday evening. Thankfully there's now lots of free on-demand TV and we'll pretend that I don't torrent the other things.
@dalehymes60042 жыл бұрын
Brilliant testing mate! I'll throw you another challenge. After Slingbox and its iOS player were disabled, I've been looking for a replacement. I bought the latest Nyrius unit (2022) and it works OK to my second computer monitor. I'm still challenged by a distance/wall with dropout issues, but I might be able to move the receiver closer to the ceiling. But... I'm trying to find a way to get the signal to display on an iPad Pro. That way I don't give up one of my monitors to something I may not watch constantly. I like to watch what my wife is watching in another room. Slingbox worked over WiFi with its iOS player brilliantly. Any new thoughts? Thanks!
@fluxington4 жыл бұрын
A great video that answers so many of my questions. But one question it raised... you have aluminium twin and earth mains cable in your house?
@SyedWajihHassan6 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for sharing.. Cant press like enough times.
@victorf78382 жыл бұрын
love you for this video Vince
@redsmeg746 жыл бұрын
Would be interesting to have try a wired to wireless bridge on the mirabox... do you have a wireless bridge or perhaps a router you could install openwrt to make into a wireless bridge.
@beranikotor71976 жыл бұрын
yes, i would also like to know. HDMI over IP with wireless router.
@AndrewTaylor19796 жыл бұрын
@mymatevince, have you thought of trying 22awg cat5 or 6 cable? Had a similar issue on aircraft, they used cat5 24awg and would be pixelated. We replaced the cables with 22awg cat6 and it worked. Might be good for longer distances at higher resolutions.
@Mymatevince6 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the info :-)
@fiderhit5 жыл бұрын
Hi. Interesting video. Are there 4K solutions already? Thx. H./Belgium
@ianrenton57093 жыл бұрын
Hi Vince, Could you tell me what make of HDMI 3D splitter you are using? I can get my Virgin 360 box in lounge and bedroom by just switching cables but having tried various switches that didn't work can you tell me the make of your HDMI Splitter as there are so many to choose from. Thanks, great video
@mentypython4 жыл бұрын
@19:51 really lookin into getting something like this (hdmi over ip) but this tip of getting a seperate switch, i felt that was manditory, if u didnt want internets to look at exactly what u where watching!!!
@jonesttt6 жыл бұрын
Awesome video. Well done testing 👍
@vk3fbab6 жыл бұрын
The main property of cat 6 that makes it superior to cat 5e or lower is that the twists on the pairs are closer together increasing noise immunity and allowing higher bandwidth. Larger conductors help a little with running at higher frequencies but are also there for improved POE performance. So cat 6A and Cat 7 have even tighter twist ratios. You will also note that each pair has a unique twist ratio this is to stop pairs interfering with each other. If you have a 100pr telephone cable there are 100 different twist ratios in that one cable even though it is probably only cat 3.
@Mymatevince6 жыл бұрын
Great info, thanks for sharing it :-)
@james107396 жыл бұрын
I had seen this cheap ones and kinda figured that they were just connecting the bare minimum wires and figured the 2 cat cables was better but good to know
@paulnewman11874 жыл бұрын
Great video - very helpful. 1 quick question - if I only want to view my Virgin box on another TV in the kitchen, could I use a HD repeater over powerline, or does it need to be a HD extender,?
@AndyPerry19724 жыл бұрын
Great Video! I know this is 2+ years old now, but I just wondered about the Mesh systems these days. I am assuming that this may resolve the wi-fi issue you mentioned through those thick walls, as I believe they work similar to powerline adapters in terms of spreading the wifi signal. The wireless HDMI should then hopefully get the good signal. Maybe I will have to try it out some time :-)
@samtuckett52136 жыл бұрын
Slight issue with the cable, you will start to loose quality. Neo Plus 8 are the best company for everything. It would be good if you could do a review on their ultra HD matrix? Apart from that really cool video!
@bazli6 жыл бұрын
Agreed.. Check out the pulse eight neo:4 matrix.. It should work well for your setup and all the receivers are poe so you don't have to have those extra power adapters at the tv end.. Nice video btw :)