Cat6e?

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Hi.I currently have standard copper cable internet from o2 and the router is downstairs,while my pc is upstairs.i run a cat5 ethernet cable (50m)through the roof and all is fine.However,I am getting bt fibre next week and was wondering-

1/ Will the fact the cable is 50m degrade the signal in any way? and
2/ will a cat6e cable make any noticeable difference?

Any help would be greatly appreciated.Please excuse any naivety before its pointed out :D
p.s-speed for fibre is 78mg down/20 up
 
BTW.. it's not meg... it's Megabits, which is about 9 to 10MB. If you are running a gigabit router and a gigabit Ethernet port on your pc, then you will in no way be able to saturate that 5e. Even with 100T you'd not saturate it. 50m of decent quality CAT5E will be more than enough.

50M is hell of a long way btw.. have you got it coiled up in the loft or something?
 
i just got cat6e forvmy powerline as its not expensive.

cat6 will on'y be better if there is a lot of interference around the cable as each cable is individually protected.

also cat5 is 1gbps
cat6 is 10gbps

so future proof is always better

but you wnt notice much if any difference now
 
Cat6e doesn't exist as a standard, there's no reason to expect it to be any better that cat5e. It could even be worse as there's no standard to work to.

Cat6, or cat6a, are real standards and will support higher bandwidths than cat5e.

In a domestic network anything beyond standard gigabit is so far away it's not worth worrying about. The one possible reason to install cat6(a) is if the cabling might be used for hdmi senders, in which case make sure the cables are installed in pairs.
 
Thank you very much for the replies.very helpful and yes it is coiled round under the wardrobe where it enters the bedroom (ooh er!) but only because im lazy and havnt bought a shorter cable yet :)
 
From experience, decent quality Cat5 can do greater than 100M at Gigabit still so your 50M will pose no problem at all. Don't waste your time or money replacing this as you'll not notice any benefits unless your already have issues (e.g. poor quality cable, interference due to lack of shielding or poor termination)
 
but you wnt notice much if any difference now

Well as stated in this thread it'll be impossible to tell the difference, as decent Cat5 is more than up to the job already.

I'm not a fan of the wishy washy 'well it might be better/its a higher number so must be faster' approach to PCs :p
 
Well as stated in this thread it'll be impossible to tell the difference, as decent Cat5 is more than up to the job already.

I'm not a fan of the wishy washy 'well it might be better/its a higher number so must be faster' approach to PCs :p

its pretty harf to test though.

cat 5 is 1gbps which is standard router and modem si easy to test.

cat 6 is 10 gbps but u find a router and modem that supports 10gbps.

the only way your gonna know is run lan tests now and put cat6 in then try again.
 
Cat5 - Don't use ever, it's obsolete.
Cat5e - 1gb up to 50M.
Cat6 - 10gb up to 50M.
Cat6a - 10gb up to 100M.

IIRC anyway. :).
 
Cat5e is fine for Gigabit transfer up to 100m guaranteed.

Shorter the length of your cable, the faster it transfers the data as it is a shorter distance.

Don't bother with Cat6, unnecessary.

Buy a new, fresh Cat5e pre terminated patch lead with no kinks or knots and make sure it is good quality with high copper content. You can normally tell this by the price.
 
I use pure Cat6 cabling in my house because I like to stay future proofed. ;)

The difference in cost to Cat5e is next to nothing..
 
I use pure Cat6 cabling in my house because I like to stay future proofed. ;)

The difference in cost to Cat5e is next to nothing..

+1 exactly what i was saying there isn't much in the cost tbh.

I just ordered all the Cat6 I need to replace all my cat5e now as it cost me about £5.
 
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