New Construction Home Advice for non-Network Guy - eviltoast

I’m building a house. Floor plan attached if it helps.

I’ve spent the last 3-4 days knee deep reading archived posts, watching youtube, and digesting as much information as possible. Over that time I’ve convinced myself I need a different set up roughly 12 times. Need some direction.

Budget: Not really a consideration. But less is obviously cool.

Background: I’m an enterprise software salesman buy trade, but not a network engineer. And even though I’m willing to roll my sleeves up and do a bit of learning, I really don’t want a massive – and especially not a continuous – project on my hands. I never plan to move again. The house won’t get great cell reception and I’ll be reliant on wifi calling in many cases.

Anticipated Gear List:

- 8-10 POE security cameras/NVR (hardwired)- whole home Sonos kit (16 speakers, 5 amps) (hardwired)- Multiple TVs (hardwired)- a host of IoT devices - hubs, doorbell, thermostat, other automation stuff (hub(s) hardwired)- 2 offices (computers and 1 printer hardwired)- Mesh/access points (hardwired) – this is the million dollar question

My (probably obvious) plan:

- pull all ethernet drops to a centralized location- ISP coax --> modem --> router --> POE switch- terminate all the ethernet cables to logical ports (save the POE ports for the cameras and anything else that needs power)

My Conflict(s):

I’m confident I could get it all installed properly. I’m not confident whatsoever that I could figure out how to deploy it once it was all powered up.

And, as a result, I don’t know what the hell to buy.

It seems Unifi is the default suggestion for most, and while I’m not sure is ISN’T what I’ll end up with, I do think it’s overkill for my specific needs. In our current home I have been running a google mesh and its…fine. It works, it’s not perfect, but it’s simple and essentially never has issues. Maybe I’m lucky or maybe I have very low expectations. I’m convinced I’ll have trouble troubleshooting or fixing things when they inevitably break with unifi - but I could just be psyching myself out.

I’d love to be able to set everything up once – and if I have to mess with it once or twice a year so be it – similar to my current set up.

Could I get away with this?

ISP coax --> ISP’s modem --> (need a router recommendation) --> random POE switch with enough ports to support all my gear? I might also add a UPS and surge protector.

Practically speaking, how would I initially configure/set up everything if I piece meal it together with various OEM gear? Let’s say ISP modem (should I get my own?), TPlink router, Netgear POE switch? Sorry if that’s a dumb question.

Similarly, how much more difficult/easy would a similar Unifi solution be?

Also, sorry for the rant. Struggling with info overload. I dumped so much time into this and have found myself with more questions than I started with.

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  • tx_mn@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Okay, you seem right on the line between Ubiquiti and something more “consumer” grade. What internet speeds will you have?

    One thing I’ll promise you want to do is to chuck the Google Wifi :)

    Based on the research you’ve done and the career, I don’t think you should be intimidated by a Unifi setup. We did one second home piecemeal and the biggest frustration is the endless apps that we have to use… door locks, remember to open Yale, front door, open Ring, switches - different app, audio - Sonos.

    I would decide on your chosen ecosystem and then back into your wifi. Things like door locks, Sonos, etc. are going to be picked based on aesthetic and what you’re used to, so it really just comes down to the cameras from what you’ve shared.

    If you really want plug and play just works wifi that can POE, the Eero POE gateway is an option but then you’re locked into their APs which lack something like an outdoor AP you might want (Unifi easily could, or could add an in Wall AP when you find a dead spot). I would reallly recommend picking one ecosystem for your wifi even if you don’t want to customize now. It’s just better