note sure a 22u rack will fit in that wall cut out space, or that space in the wall is like a wiring closet, so my comments may not be truly relevant or not.
i have a 24u (half-rack) in my basement office. i put 72 ports worth of patch panel into the wall and that’s where all the house wall-ports feed into (i like hardwire, not a big fan of wifi). right below it is a 48 port gigabit switch which is strictly a client port hub. http://www.beekerland.com/misc/my_rack_5.jpg
i would resist the urge to take wires directly out of the wall and go directly into the rack. whether your connect from the rack to the wall is into a patch panel or switch, you want that connection to be via Cat-6 patch cables. that way you’re terminating your cable runs to a fixed point at the wall.
hope this helps.
Cheers
note sure a 22u rack will fit in that wall cut out space, or that space in the wall is like a wiring closet, so my comments may not be truly relevant or not.
i have a 24u (half-rack) in my basement office. i put 72 ports worth of patch panel into the wall and that’s where all the house wall-ports feed into (i like hardwire, not a big fan of wifi). right below it is a 48 port gigabit switch which is strictly a client port hub.
http://www.beekerland.com/misc/my_rack_5.jpg
in the rack itself, there is a 48 port gigabit switch which handles all the network connections within the rack. http://www.beekerland.com/misc/my_rack_3.jpg
http://www.beekerland.com/misc/my_rack_4.jpg
the two switches talk to each other over a 2-port LAG group.
i would resist the urge to take wires directly out of the wall and go directly into the rack. whether your connect from the rack to the wall is into a patch panel or switch, you want that connection to be via Cat-6 patch cables. that way you’re terminating your cable runs to a fixed point at the wall. hope this helps.
Cheers