Mixing Ethernet Cables


Hello All,

I have a question about mixing ethernet cables of different ratings.  My house was wired 20 years ago with Cat 5 cable.  My listening room is in the basement which is two floors away from the router.  Wifi to my streamer has been OK but occasionally drops out so I would like to connect my streamer via ethernet.  Running a new cable (Cat 6a or Cat 8) from the router to the streamer would be very expensive (labor cost).  I can split existing Cat 5 in the basement with a switch and run a patch cord from the switch to the streamer.

Would running Cat 8 from the switch to the streamer be of any benefit given that the signal is only Cat 5 from the router to the switch?

Thanks.

ma128

Would running Cat 8 from the switch to the streamer be of any benefit given that the signal is only Cat 5 from the router to the switch?

No.

Unless you are at a national lab doing some huge data intensive movement, or running pornhub, your bit moving demands have been working well 25 years for the reason that it was designed to work.

You might want to look into a Goggle MESH network. The nodes feed ethernet cable to the components. Our router is upstairs, the Mac Mini server that runs Roon core is downstairs; one streamer is upstairs, the other downstairs. The sound quality is excellent. The streamers are Ayre QX-5 Twenty and ultraRendu with Ayre QB-9 DSD DAC. Files Roon shows as 192/24 or DSD are played as that by the streamers.

db

First, see if you can fix up your wifi.  Get a phone or PC based Wifi analyzer app, they are free.

Try to pick the least used channel.  If you can use 5 GHz that's usually less congested and higher bandwidth.

 

Holmz and btscott are correct.  Just use the copper Cat5 and you'll be more than fine. 

Holmz and btscott are correct. Just use the copper Cat5 and you’ll be more than fine.

If one is starting from scratch then a cat8 makes sense, especially if they are moving a lot of data and doing video editing or some other thing.

(CAT 9 sound even better as cats have 9 lives…)

But to upgrade an existing system, used exclusively for audio, it makes no sense.

It would be like pulling out the motor in a Prius, to put a Tesla motor in it, in order to drive through a school zone… Or like using alligator shoes to walk thru Walmart.
Technically it may be better, but effectively it is not.

I think it gets back to the old adage, It's only as good as the weakest link.

If you want the benefits of cat 8 it should be throughout the chain.

ozzy