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BT Socket to RJ45

arunmarati
Explorer

Dear All,

I have an BT socket in my 1st floor room and thinking to get it convertor to RJ45 so i can connect my desktop with the CAT6 cable.

Is it doable ? can anyone suggest how i can convert this and also can EE technical team assist here?

 

6 REPLIES 6
Mustrum
EE Community Star
EE Community Star

@arunmarati   simple answer is no. Apart from anything else you would need another connection at the other end.

A simple way to get an ethernet connection between two points, without laying a properly spec'd cable is to use powerlines. You just plug them in the two points you need to connect, they have ethernet sockets to connect your PC to router or whatever.

HTH

 

JimM11
Brilliant Contributor
Brilliant Contributor

@arunmarati As @Mustrum has suggested you would be quicker and possibly less expense to purchase a powerline to do your required, there is not enough cores in a cable that a BT extension/main socket needed for your requirements. Do not expect the speeds mentioned in any of the manufactures spec's and keep away from connecting ANY of the units to extension cables, powerline does not like or work great through those.

XRaySpeX
EE Community Star
EE Community Star

Which EE BB plan are you on? What EE router do you have?

Where's your BB coming in? At what type of socket?

If you think I helped please feel free to hit the "Thumbs Up" button below.

To phone EE CS: Dial Freephone +44 800 079 8586 - Option 1 for Mobile Phone & Mobile Broadband or Option 2 for Home Broadband & Home Phone

ISPs: 1999: Freeserve 48K Dial-Up > 2005: Wanadoo 1 Meg BB > 2007: Orange 2 Meg BB > 2008: Orange 8 Meg LLU > 2010: Orange 16 Meg LLU > 2011: Orange 20 Meg WBC > 2014: EE 20 Meg WBC > 2020: EE 40 Meg FTTC > 2022:EE 80 Meg FTTC SoGEA > 2025 EE 150 Meg FTTP
arunmarati
Explorer

@Mustrum  & @JimM11 - Thanks for your response. Basically, I need a direct connection from the router to my desktop because I am into trading and can't afford drops in the network, which could happen with WiFi.

 

JimM11
Brilliant Contributor
Brilliant Contributor

@arunmarati If you answer the questions that @XRaySpeX posed to you, may have a better idea how to assist, you could also explain the relationship to were your router is placed with respect to the position of you PC!

@arunmarati   powerlines do not use WiFi.,.

They use the mains wiring within your house, so iperformance will depend on distance between your router and PC.

Given what you have said so far though, you may wish to consider getting a network specialist in to advice on connectivity and ensuring you have suitable backup facilities in order to reduce any single point of failure. This could include ensuring getting optimal WiFi connectivity.