Cameraguy:
Cat 6:
- stiffer, a consideration if you're pulling through a long or multi-turn conduit run.
- a tad trickier for
crimping on an RJ45
- a wee bit more expensive
- 1Gb bandwidth cat 6 is overkill for ip cams
Cat 5e:
- flexible, crimping is a bit easier, etc.
- but the minor advantages dictate you keep things in perspective, to weigh pros and cons.
Consider:
1) Today's ip cams don't need 1Gb (cat6). But down the road, might the higher b/w have benefits?
2) Some folks add more cams later. And to avoid pulling more runs of cable, they use a 4 to 1 splitter. Excellent review here by legendary nayr:
1 to 4 PoE Extender
Using an extender on a Cat 6 cable MAY be better-able to handle 4 cams on one cable, especially multiple 8Mp cams....
3) When I pulled
cat 5 many years ago during my home remodel,
cat 5e was just coming out. Back then home networking was 10Mb. Times change. Technology advances exponentially faster every decade. Using cat6 seems prudent, from a future-proof perspective.
Me?
- I'd pull cat6, to avoid being penny wise and pound foolish.
- I've learned the
biggest investment (in labor) is pulling cable. Install good cable.
- Cams
can and
will be upgraded over time. Trivial compared to upgrading your already-pulled cable! And pull an extra cable on every run!
My two cents: Spend the $50
Fastb