For our Voice Data and Network Cabling we prefer to use Molex, ICC, or Hubbel.  These  Manufacturer's offer products that will exceed your expectations.  High quality with dependability, at a reasonable cost. Each member of our Installation Department is BICSI certified and most members are RCDD certified.

Fiber Optics
A fiber optic system may have very high bandwidth, sometimes operating at data rates of 10Gb/s, equivalent to more than 120,000 standard telephone calls over one pair of optical fibers (one transmitting and one receiving). Under Lab conditions, data rates as high as 10 terabits per second have been demonstrated (150 million telephone calls). Datacomms type fibers have a lower information carrying capacity but are capable of 1Gb/s with some 10 Gigabit systems now in use.
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Swing-Out Racks
Patch Cords

Level 5, 6,7 Data Cabling
Category 5 cable, commonly known as Cat 5, is an unshielded twisted pair cable type designed for high signal integrity. With the 2001 introduction of the
TIA/EIA-568-B standard, the category 5 cabling specification was made obsolete and superseded by the category 5e specification. Category 6 cabling is a cable standard for Gigabit Ethernet and other network protocols that is backward compatible with the Category 5/5e and Category 3 cable standards. Cat-6 features more stringent specifications for crosstalk and system noise. The cable standard is suitable for 10BASE-T / 100BASE-TX and 1000BASE-T (Gigabit Ethernet) connections. It provides performance of up to 250 MHz Category 7 cabling is a cable standard for Ethernet and other interconnect technologies that can be made to be backwards compatible with traditional CAT5 and CAT6 Ethernet cable. CAT7 features even more stringent specifications for crosstalk and system noise than CAT6. To achieve this, shielding has been added for individual wire pairs and the cable as a whole. Read More.

Coaxial cable
Coaxial cable is an electrical cable consisting of a round conducting wire, surrounded by an insulating spacer, surrounded by a cylindrical conducting sheath, usually surrounded by a final insulating layer. It is used as a high-frequency transmission line to carry a high-frequency or broadband signal. Sometimes DC power (called bias) is added to the signal to supply the equipment at the other end, as in direct broadcast satellite receivers. Because the electromagnetic field carrying the signal exists (ideally) only in the space between the inner and outer conductors, it cannot interfere with or suffer interference from external electromagnetic fields.

Coaxial cables may be rigid or flexible. Rigid types have a solid sheath, while flexible types have a braided sheath, both usually of thin copper wire. The inner insulator, also called the dielectric, has a significant effect on the cable's properties, such as its characteristic impedance and its attenuation. The dielectric may be solid or perforated with air spaces. Connections to the ends of coaxial cables are usually made with RF connectors.

Patch Panels
Floor-mount Racks
Fiber Break-Out Boxes
Computer Cabling Networking
Every office needs their computers networked together.  We install all the cables.