I ve tried using clear tape to hold my ethernet cable along the baseboards and up and along the door frame but it only lasts a week before the tape starts falling off.
Ethernet cable around door frame.
Or i need to buy a 100 ft ethernet cable and run it the long way around the room including up and around the doorframe to the hallway using.
Edited by landingspot on monday 12th march 22 26.
Staple the cord around the outside of the door frame when you come to a doorway.
There are several options depending on the structure of the wall the doorway goes through and on whether or not a surface mounted method is deemed okay with the client.
Help please ci folk.
Windows are a little simpler to bypass than doors since most have stud framing below the sill through which you can run the cable.
The other passage is an actual doorway with door frame.
I have about 15 feet of coaxial cable running into a bedroom from the door.
There are no sharp angles.
Typical solutions used in a domestic setting in a house include directly at.
Sometimes you might need to stretch wires across a room such as when hooking up speakers to a stereo system or extending an ethernet cable.
Electrical work can be complicated but there are some simple tasks that you can complete yourself without having to bring in an electrician.
With doors however it is best to route the cable through the ceiling above or the floor below if possible.
The plastic sheathing on most cables accepts enamel and the cords are easier to paint before you run them.
The floor is carpet by the way.
The nails pretty much just prevent the cable from falling off the door frame.
One example is running wires or cables for your devices and appliances around a doorway.
I can t think of many other ways to get around it.
Routing around doors windows.
Does anyone have a more permanent solution to holding the cable in place.
Can the door frame come away and put the cables in the frame.
I m having my speaker and hdmi cable in a 30x15 dline white trunking and have also got the same problem as you but i have decided to take the cable around the door in the trunking and to use the flat corner pieces that dline do as well to give it a professional look for the corners around the door frame and at the bottom.
A single ethernet cable is the least likely to have problems but if you find the flat one is more expensive you can always run a normal one to the doorframe then inline coupler costs little flat cable for a short distance another inline coupler and then back to normal cable.