Damn man this is the best ever. Combing wires isnt recommended by BICSI anymore because I think the hard plastic tools damages the wires a bit and causes crosstalk. But this is bomb af.
This is great! I built one immediately. People in these comments complaining that it only solves one problem and not all forseeable problems into infinity. Nice job!
Very nice! Beats the hell out of $50-$100 for a cable dressing puck!! Just spent a couple days cigarette packing about a 60ft run of over 300 cables by hand.... Several more closets to go on the site... Major suckage. We didn't cig pack Cat5 for the past 20 years because of crosstalk/continuity issues, but with Cat 6 they are wanting it cig packed again... Just so you can lock it in a closet where only one or two IT guys will ever see it...
You can dress cables in the correct way with nothing but velcro. Kind of like he is doing but you can do way more cables. 3 or 4 pieces of vector around each part of the cylinder of cable. Than one around the main trunk. Slide down some put on another piece above it and slide the original velcro down.
Great technique for building a puck but, look at what happened to the dressing at panel. I would suggest using zip ties to secure the dressing at the panel. Then use a piece of velcro to collect the inner cables and just one piece of velcro for the outer cables. For the first few feet, keep checking your initial dressing because that's what the customer is going to see first. Combing the cables ahead of the inner velcro is key but keeping everything tight and attention to detail will deliver an amazing product without the concern of your puck falling apart. Remember, anything built needs to be maintained.
Damn man this is the best ever.
Combing wires isnt recommended by BICSI anymore because I think the hard plastic tools damages the wires a bit and causes crosstalk.
But this is bomb af.
This is great!
I built one immediately.
People in these comments complaining that it only solves one problem and not all forseeable problems into infinity.
Nice job!
Wow, didn't see that coming. I thought where is he going with this? But the result is amazing!
Ingenious
Very nice! Beats the hell out of $50-$100 for a cable dressing puck!! Just spent a couple days cigarette packing about a 60ft run of over 300 cables by hand.... Several more closets to go on the site... Major suckage. We didn't cig pack Cat5 for the past 20 years because of crosstalk/continuity issues, but with Cat 6 they are wanting it cig packed again... Just so you can lock it in a closet where only one or two IT guys will ever see it...
You can dress cables in the correct way with nothing but velcro. Kind of like he is doing but you can do way more cables. 3 or 4 pieces of vector around each part of the cylinder of cable. Than one around the main trunk. Slide down some put on another piece above it and slide the original velcro down.
Essentially how this guy did it but the correct direction. Towards the patch panel not back into the ceiling.
Brilliant idea for cable comb repacement
Make your own comb. Smart
Badass bro, thank you for your video.
ywe TOTALLY realistic because I ALWAYS have all my cables pre jacked put in the patch panel and then cut at the end so I can dress it!?
So dress the cable back into the ceiling to cause a mess. A) No
awesome thank you!!!
This is awesome.
That’s pretty neat
Testing this out today
Any video with top entrance in rack how you organize where only acess is from door side to cables
Nice 👍
very nice
we can't do like this bulk bundle , other side terminated cables,
😂😂 COOL!!!!
Somebody came up with a device named "Cable Comb" !!!!!
How do you dress.them to land In nice
Great technique for building a puck but, look at what happened to the dressing at panel. I would suggest using zip ties to secure the dressing at the panel. Then use a piece of velcro to collect the inner cables and just one piece of velcro for the outer cables. For the first few feet, keep checking your initial dressing because that's what the customer is going to see first. Combing the cables ahead of the inner velcro is key but keeping everything tight and attention to detail will deliver an amazing product without the concern of your puck falling apart. Remember, anything built needs to be maintained.
Great Idea
Will try and use .But...
We usually dress then Terminate.