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Networking closet help for a new build

Posted on 2/24/26 at 6:43 pm
Posted by Will Cover
Davidson, NC
Member since Mar 2007
40092 posts
Posted on 2/24/26 at 6:43 pm
I am currently planning a new home build and am setting up a dedicated networking closet. My goal is a clean, hidden setup that stays simple but functional. I already have my Smurf Tubing ready to go and plan to run PoE to every bedroom and the office with multiple drops in each room. I also have two or three wireless access points planned for the ceilings.

Inside the closet, I want to hide my fiber box, a 24 or 32-port Ubiquiti PoE switch (leaning Ubiquiti), an A/V receiver, an Xbox, and a Blu-ray player. I would prefer to have everything seated right in a networking rack if possible.

I am looking for recommendations on what type of networking rack I should consider. My main requirements are that it needs to attach to the wall and provide really easy access to the back of the ports for maintenance. Since the A/V receiver is likely the deepest and heaviest piece of equipment, I want to make sure I get the sizing right.

I am also still undecided on whether to go with Cat6, Cat6a, or Cat7 for the runs. If anyone has suggestions on the best rack models for this type of setup or advice on which cable standard makes the most sense for a long-term home build, I’d love to hear your thoughts -- and see your setup.
Posted by baseballmind1212
Missouri City
Member since Feb 2011
3390 posts
Posted on 2/24/26 at 8:45 pm to
Cat6a for the cable. Cat 7 rating is still not recognized by the TIA (ie the rating is not legitimate/tested). 6A will handle 10GBps, your network equipment couldn't outrun it.

I've had good luck with navepoint racks, nothing fancy but they get the job done.

I personally wouldn't recommend wall mount, especially if you are going to end up putting a ups in there.

Couple personal tips ive learned from building commercial buildings...

1. Put a pipe or two in at your headend rack. Easiest and cheapest way to do this is use a couple 2" PVC pipes stubbed out the wall/ceiling into the attic. Cheaper than conduit, better than smurf tube.

2. Put 2 separate duplex outlets at your rack, on 2 separate circuits.

3. Include a ups in your build, will save you tons of headache from power blips making your whole system power cycle.

4. Run data for cameras, even if you aren't going to put them initially. Way easier during construction.

5. If you want everything in a rack, investigate IR repeaters. Dumb thing to overlook. Can be done over cat6.

6. Include a NAS. My entire life is filed on mine. Every car maintenance receipt, healthcare receipt, important docs, all family pics, etc. In a file structure like God intended.
Posted by MStant1
Houston, TX
Member since Sep 2010
4553 posts
Posted on 2/24/26 at 9:04 pm to
Honestly there isn’t anything special about one rack vs the other in my opinion. All depends on if you want it enclosed, open, to have its own vent or fan system, etc. They also have racks that are freestanding that are on wheels vs wall, you can also have a wall mounted one with shelves that slide like drawers, etc.

Personally, if I were building, I’d make sure my network room was properly vented because the regular closet in my house that I turned into a network closet gets really hot in the summer.

As far as cable, the general online nerd consensus is to go with Cat6 or 6a and don’t even bother with higher cats. There is greater likelihood to get scammed with fake Cat 7 or 8, and quite literally almost nothing requires either standard. Both 6 and 6a will be relatively future proof for years to come and when things start to outpace either of those, we likely won’t be using Ethernet but Fiber lines.

My modest setup:

This post was edited on 2/24/26 at 9:17 pm
Posted by BabySam
FL
Member since Oct 2010
1591 posts
Posted on 2/24/26 at 9:10 pm to
Baseball hit my rec for NavePoint, i usually go with them or StarTech. There's also SysRack or if trying for functionality at lowest price Tecmojo. This option is intriguing but have never tried it (plan well with slack)
LINK
Posted by bluebarracuda
Member since Oct 2011
19254 posts
Posted on 2/24/26 at 9:31 pm to
Ubiquiti fanboys are so cute
Posted by MStant1
Houston, TX
Member since Sep 2010
4553 posts
Posted on 2/25/26 at 7:55 am to
Guilty
Posted by notsince98
KC, MO
Member since Oct 2012
21750 posts
Posted on 2/25/26 at 8:12 am to
you will need proper cooling for a "closet." Good luck with that. That can have all sorts of ramifications if not done properly and it is long odds to find a residential person that can do that.

Personally, I'd recommend putting your stuff in a portion of an unfinished area like a basement if you will have one.
This post was edited on 2/25/26 at 8:14 am
Posted by bluebarracuda
Member since Oct 2011
19254 posts
Posted on 2/25/26 at 8:48 am to
quote:

I want to hide my fiber box


If it's an ATT Fiber box, that's 6u

quote:

24 or 32-port Ubiquiti PoE switch (leaning Ubiquiti)/quote]

2U since you'll want a patch panel too

[quote]A/V receiver


probably 4u

quote:

an Xbox


Could probably share the shelf with the fiber box

quote:

Blu-ray player


Another 3-4u I would guess

Probably looking at a 15U rack, minimum. You could add a PDU to the rack to run all power to, and then have a floor model UPS to avoid filling more rack space. Navepoint makes some nice wall mountable racks with swinging gates
Posted by CAD703X
Liberty Island
Member since Jul 2008
92592 posts
Posted on 2/25/26 at 9:53 am to
i have this one and love it so much. the instructions and labels are so irreverant that it made setting everything up really fun but there may be cheaper alternatives on amazon that work just as well.

echogear 15u

seriously, the setup instructions that come with the rack are hysterical.
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