Cables for wall mounting of TV

Cables for wall mounting of TV

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Discussion

hman

Original Poster:

7,487 posts

200 months

Tuesday 15th December 2009
quotequote all
I am going to be mounting my tv on the wall (stud partition).

I think I have the mounting worked out, but the plethora of cables is the bit that I'm not confident about.

I will need 2 x 6 or 7 metre HDMI cables

Q1. Can I run this in cat 6 with some sort of hdmi connector soldered to the end of the cable or should I run the cat 6 to a wall plate with an hdmi socket on it then connect to this with an hdmi cable?

Q2. Currently I have Sky+ (for the time being) so will need a Scart lead, are these available as a cable and plug seperately, if so is do you tak these to a wall socket or as a flying lead (as per the hdmi in Q1).

Q3. Phono cable, anything I need to be specifically buying - spec wise?

Q4. I will need to take 2 x hdmi (cat 6 I think?), 1 x scart, 1 x phono, and power ( about 100mm apart from the signal cables so seperate conduit) how many wall plates will I need??


I appreciate any help!!

Plotloss

67,280 posts

276 months

Tuesday 15th December 2009
quotequote all
1) Use HDMI rather than UTP cables. At 6 or 7m you'll be fine and in all likelyhood using long HDMIs is cheaper than using Baluns and 2xUTP cables.

2) SCART carries either Composite video and Audio which can be replaced with 3 x Coaxial leads or RGB and Audio which can be replaced with 5 x Coaxial leads.

3) Very cheap phono cables use a twisted pair arrangement rather than coax, so just run 2 x Coaxial.

4) Rather depends, if the outlets are covered, just use a brush plate arrangement top and bottom, far easier and cheaper.

headcase

2,389 posts

223 months

Wednesday 16th December 2009
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Stay away from wall plates unless you specifically have to have them, they look nice in catalogues but in RL they are a PITA (Just another place for a bad connection), so if you can just use long cables and to make the cable exit nice and neat then i normally use a blanking plate modified with a Dremel. You may also want to put in an Optical if indeed your TV uses it for audio out just incase you will want to feed an audio system at a later date.

allgonepetetong

1,188 posts

225 months

Wednesday 16th December 2009
quotequote all
Slight hijack, but I am using wall plates and banana plugs for my 5.1 audio (equipment outside the room in a cupboard under the stairs)

I haven't yet moved in so not been able to test it but do you think I will have problems with connections or will these be OK?

I do not have any wall plates for video.

[AJ]

3,079 posts

204 months

Wednesday 16th December 2009
quotequote all
allgonepetetong said:
Slight hijack, but I am using wall plates and banana plugs for my 5.1 audio (equipment outside the room in a cupboard under the stairs)

I haven't yet moved in so not been able to test it but do you think I will have problems with connections or will these be OK?

I do not have any wall plates for video.
I used wall plates and banana plugs for my speakers in my last house and I never had a problem with the connections. It was all very neat. This time I'm going to wire directly though, just because fitting sockets would be a PTA in this instance.

Thudd

3,100 posts

213 months

Wednesday 16th December 2009
quotequote all
Unsure of your rig, but www.thatcable.com have been getting 5star reviews recently and do lengthy HDMI cables for not a lot.
Could you get away with just plastering in some trunking?

http://www.whathifi.com/Review/ThatCable-HDMI/

They do up to 20m, I think.

headcase

2,389 posts

223 months

Wednesday 16th December 2009
quotequote all
Bananna plugs are quite robust so they will proberbly be ok, scarts and HDMI's can be quite finikey so plates are not really the best idea for those.