Carefully pry off the trim or molding at the top of the door removing any nails that hold the trim in place.
Run ethernet cable around door frame.
To hide cables behind a door frame or baseboard follow these steps.
There are no sharp angles.
The ethernet cable for outside use just has uv resistant sheathing.
Routing around doors windows.
I anchored it very weakly around the door frame with about 6 nails applying very little pressure to the outside of the cabling.
There are several options depending on the structure of the wall the doorway goes through and on whether or not a surface mounted method is deemed okay with the client.
I ve tried using clear tape to hold my ethernet cable along the baseboards and up and along the door frame but it only lasts a week before the tape starts falling off.
The floor is carpet by the way.
The nails pretty much just prevent the cable from falling off the door frame.
Pry off the baseboards along the path of the cords with a pry bar.
I need to run an ethernet cable from my router to the roku 3 by my tv.
One cord channel cable concealer cmc 03 cord cover wall cable management system 125 cable hider raceway kit for a power cord ethernet cable speaker wire 8x l15 7in w0 59in h0 39in white d line white medium cord cover kit 13ft self adhesive wire hider cable raceway to hide wires on wall cable management 4 x 39in lengths and.
Also remove the trim for any baseboard where you want the wire to follow.
Does anyone have a more permanent solution to holding the cable in place.
If the cord needs to go past a doorway pry the casing off the door frame.
The concern about using plenum rated cable and avoiding running cable through hvac vents is a big deal though.
A single ethernet cable is the least likely to have problems but if you find the flat one is more expensive you can always run a normal one to the doorframe then inline coupler costs little flat cable for a short distance another inline coupler and then back to normal cable.
Or i need to buy a 100 ft ethernet cable and run it the long way around the room including up and around the doorframe to the hallway using these.
If this is temporary enough i don t know that it s all that big a deal since it s low voltage.
With doors however it is best to route the cable through the ceiling above or the floor below if possible.
It s all fun and games until you re trying to escape a burning.
The other passage is an actual doorway with door frame.
Both my internet and tv setups are in my living room.
Windows are a little simpler to bypass than doors since most have stud framing below the sill through which you can run the cable.
I have about 15 feet of coaxial cable running into a bedroom from the door.