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Wired or Wireless?
Does it make sense to stick with structured wiring or to opt for a wireless whole-home solution? Short answer: both.
By Nick Bajzek, Products Editor
October 1, 2009
Professional Builder
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| A RELIABLE whole-home A/V system mixes structured wiring with wireless spot solutions. Photo: Siemens |
These systems are gaining in popularity; should a production builder opt for a tried-and-true wired system or go with a new wireless solution? Melody Bakeeff, vice president of marketing for In Control Technologies, says builders should opt for a wired "future-proof" system.
"Wired systems are the most reliable in relation to signal-response," Bakeeff says.
"Many people have trouble just with wireless Internet. Compound that with trying to control lights or other functions in the home and it can be quite frustrating."
The Consumer Electronics Association study also concluded that after-market multi-room audio/video solutions are capturing a large portion of the home entertainment marketplace. Sixty-three percent of systems were installed after the home was built. The majority of homeowners added stand-alone, after-market solutions with multi-room audio stations.
The biggest downside of a wired system is poor design, says Ide. He's seen many homes where the builders used their electrician to run low-voltage wiring, such as outdoor speakers and even cable/telephone locations. "I can't tell you the number of speakers I've seen placed where the sound will be directly impacted by a ceiling fan," he says, noting that although wireless systems may be convenient for retrofitting, they can still suffer from installation issues.
Aaron Gutin, national sales director for Access Networks, says most of the solutions work off either a hub or the signal is "daisy-chained" and passed-on from one piece of equipment to the other. "So if you don't have a substantial enough amount of equipment, the signal can become weak and the response times are significantly slowed, or potential devices might not work at all, due to the spacing," Gutin says.
Just make sure it worksSimplicity is the bottom line, says Laura N. Hubbard, manager of communications for the Consumer Electronics Association.
Bill Jeppsen, public relations manager for Ruckus Wireless, agrees: "So, while we are biased for a wireless solution, we're grounded in reality. There are serious cost and practicality issues. Each and every situation is different."
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© 2009, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.










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