Telephone Cable/Wire Installation Tips
Summary: Telephone cable requires some care to wire correctly. Home telephone wiring is easier with my tips. Pay attention to telephone wire type and size, stripping insulation and attaching wires to screws when doing telephone jack wiring.
Related Articles: installing a telephone outlet, wiring troubleshooting, wiring tips
Separate Holes
Avoid the temptation of running your telephone wires in the same holes as high voltage wiring. This is the first mistake I often see. This practice places the telephone wire parallel and in close proximity with the high voltage wiring. This in turn can lead to interference on the telephone wire. When electricity flows through the higher voltage wire, it can sometimes induce an electromagnetic field in the telephone wire.
Try to stay at least 16 to 24 inches away, if possible from high voltage wires. This can often only be accomplished by drilling a separate set of holes for the phone wires. Don't drill less than a 3/8 inch hole.
Wire Type / Size
Use UL approved twisted pair solid conductor wire. 22 or 24 gauge is preferred. I highly recommend that you use 6 conductor wire instead of 4 conductor. This means that 6 wires are bundled together inside the outer insulation. Why the need for the extra two? I like to have at least two separate phone possibilities available at each outlet with a spare pair in case of a wire failure. This can only be accomplished with 6 conductor wire.
Home Runs..... No, not like Baseball...!
A home run in wiring refers to a single cable that leads from a central junction point to an individual outlet location. It does this without stopping at any other outlet location on the way. Your phone cables should all be home runs. Most electricians run the cable in a series. In other words, they wire from the central phone location to and through each outlet location. This practice limits your ability to isolate trouble. It also doesn't let you turn off a phone in a separate room without penalizing other downstream phones.
Stripping Insulation
You should purchase the inexpensive special wire strippers for low voltage wiring. They do a great job. However, the hardest insulation to remove is the outer cable insulation which surrounds all the inner wires. You MUST carefully remove this without scoring or removing insulation from the inner wires. This can be tough to do. I remove the outer insulation by gently using only partial pressure on the wire stripper's largest setting. This allows you to partially cut through the insulation. While applying this pressure, I pull the stripper towards the end of the wire. The insulation then rips apart without scoring any of the inner wires.
Attaching Wires to Screws
Did you know there is a right and a wrong way to attach wires around screws? If you do it incorrectly, the wire will unwind as you tighten the screw. As you look at the screw head, always wrap the wire around the screw in a clockwise fashion. Do not wrap the wire around the shaft of the screw several turns. In fact, the wire only needs to wrap around the screw just a little less then one turn. Try to minimize the amount of insulation you remove from each individual wire as well. Exposed wires can touch one another when you jam them into the box when you screw the outlet to the box. If the wires touch, it can short out the connection.
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Comments:
krutibash panda 31 Dec 2007, 03:24
We want to install 50pair telephone cable.Under what debth it should
go.Please reply immediately.
AsktheBuilder 31 Dec 2007, 08:01
Panda Man,
I would bury it at least 4 feet deep so that someone would have to work hard to severe it.
scheryl 10 Jan 2008, 10:27
my local phone co does not reinstal lines how do i wire from outside box to
the inside house do i need to have anything turned off. thanks a lot
AsktheBuilder 10 Jan 2008, 10:46
Scheryl,
The column above these comments is part of a *series*. Use the search engine above and type in telephone. Read all columns that are returned in the results.
Marla 18 Apr 2008, 23:22
I want to remove a second line and make all the phone jacks from the second
line the same as the original line (or phone number). How do I do that
from the phone box on the outside of the house?
Thanks Marla
John 16 Nov 2008, 13:31
All my phones in the house stopped working. The main phone in the kitchener
has a display that indicates another extension is in use. When you pick up
the receiver and put it to your ear it sounds like there is another phone
off the hook. I have unplugged all the phones in the other rooms and the
main phone started working however within an hour it has started doing the
same thing. No other phones are plugged in. Any ideas as to what the
problem could be.
Larry Kocen 01 Jan 2009, 14:05
I am trying to terminate the Verizon system and connect the Comcast phone
modem to the existing wiring but have run into a problem. There are two
wires that were used for the phone system, blue and white with a blue
strip. My question is if I should be concerned when I hook up the outlet
which is the traditional red yellow black white. Does it matter which wire
ii connect to the red or green?
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