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2 x RJ45 Network Splitter (TWIN PACK) – 1 x RJ45 (Male) to 2 x RJ45 (Female) Connections – ISDN – Interent – Ethernet – LAN – Twin pack because you need two of these to share an ethernet port

Posted by Notcot on Oct 3, 2010 in Handhelds & PDAs

Average Rating: 5.0 / 5 (2 Reviews)

If you do not have enough spare ethernet ports on your wall sockets network, these adapters are for you. This splitter adapter will allow you to use two ethernet devices in one spare RJ45 wall socket female port, by splitting this port into 2. Attach either two computers, to an existing CAT5E Structured cabling system. Use a CAT5E UTP Cable Economiser to allow two ports to be on a to a single 8-core (4-pair) CAT5E UTP faceplate. Then use one at the other end to split the signal to two workstations. How they work: Two CAT5E cable economiser are required, one connected to a Patch Panel and another one The Cat5e Economiser, used in pairs (one at at each end of a cable run), allows 4 pair cable to be divided in two separate twisted pair data signal sockets.

  • Brand New RJ45 Network Splitter
  • RJ45 (Male) to 2 x RJ45 (Female) Connections
  • Share your network port between two devices
  • REMEMBER: You need to use this in pairs hence the twin pack offer
  • ALSO REMEMBER: Carefully read up on how to set these up successfully

2 x RJ45 Network Splitter (TWIN PACK) – 1 x RJ45 (Male) to 2 x RJ45 (Female) Connections – ISDN – Interent – Ethernet – LAN – Twin pack because you need two of these to share an ethernet port <- Read More

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Brand New BT I-Plate – Interstitial Plate – ADSL

Posted by Notcot on Apr 22, 2010 in Phones

Average Rating: 4.5 / 5 (11 Reviews)

Product Description
Solwise Description Standard domestic telephone wiring uses three wires to carry the signal between the master socket and the extensions. Two of these wires come from the outside and are connected directly to your local telephone exchange. The third wire is generated in your master socket and carries the ‘bell’ signal which is used to ring some old-fashioned telephones when someone calls you. If you have an ADSL service with each phone connected to a micro-filter then the bell-wire is completely redundant since a bell signal is generated in each micro-filter for the few phones which still need it. Now, unfortunately, this bell-wire tends to cause some degradation to the ADSL signal as it travels about your house. The Solwise solution to this problem would be to detach the front section of your master socket and disconnect the bell-wire(s) (from pin 3) and re-fit the faceplate. The BT solution is called the iPlate! This device places a filter on the bell-wire (which remember is not required!). (The best solution for ADSL wiring is based on a centralised master faceplate splitter such as our ADSL-NTEFACE models, please consider this option if you have ADSL signal quality issues.)

  • BT Interstitial Filter
  • Broadband Accelerator

Brand New BT I-Plate – Interstitial Plate – ADSL

Buy Now for £2.25

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