I would appreciate all my friends putting their opions on board regurding the manufacturers of Jacks. Any that you prefer and the ones you avoid. I'll begin:
I prefer to work with Leviton. Reason is they are readily available. They do the job they wwere intended to do and they are priced fairly.
I avoid Hubbell like the plague.
As far as Panduit is concerned, It seems they insult my proffesionalism by making a product that avoids a punch tool. I like a clean trim when i terminate a jack and that is what a punch tool does.
Disregurd all spelling errors. I've had a few beers.
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I use ICC, I like the inline layout its makes it a lot easier and quicker to terminate. Hubble are great job security I've replaced several that others put in.
I use ICC and Leviton.They use the same faceplate so you can use either or.Now thats pretty handy if you've got a Leviton jack you can use an ICC faceplate if thats all you have.Works for me.I wish all brands were that way.
Leviton here or any keystone jack. Leviton is nice simply because in a pinch you can goto HOme Depot and get all those fancy faceplates for special jobs.
Funny how people are different. I won't touch Leviton with a 10 foot pole, and neither will none of my guys. Not really a quality thing, they just seem harder to terminate. I really like AMP, and recently found a local company selling a generic version of the AMP jack. Half the price, and haven't had an issue with them yet, and I have put in a few thousand of them.
I prefer to use the SMP jack. All the pairs you can just lay in the module and terminate easily. We use a lot of Levington also. The downside of them is having to split the green and blue pair on each side of the jack. SMP's are a little easier on the palms of your hands when terminating rather than the Levington. Unless you have one of those fancy beer coasters they give out.
Leviton here as well, with a JackRapid (trying Bunny's trick this weekend to cure the notchy-ness). I'd rather be using Lucent/Avaya/Systimax, but yeah, too pricey unless it's a huge job or spec'd.
I see ICC is now advertising color matching with Leviton products (although they can't name Lev in the ads). May have to give them a try.
I won't touch generics or house brands. Not worth the risk.
Systimax is not owned by Avaya/Lucent/AT&T anymore!! Commscope bought them a couple of years ago. Commscope has another line of jacks/hardware called "Uniprise". I was curious if anybody has used these jacks, and what your opinions where.
justbill, thanks for the edit earlier. And thanks to everyone for the opinions. I'm using this information from this thread to make a point to a few wanna be techs. They seem to listen to sales propaganda rather than experiance from veteran installers with field experiance. After this thread gets a few more days worth of input I'll sum up all the opinions and post the results.
Leviton here with a Harris Jack Rapid--any faceplates, or surface housings or patch panel plates as long as we can put Leviton inserts in them. Have tried 4 or 5 other brands but Leviton is a good priced, quality product that is readily available. That's what I want. The other ones fall down in one or more of the categories, IMHO.
I can't believe that I'm actually going to type this, but I use Ortronics and Panduit extensively, with the exception of wall and surface jacks which I use suttle for. Please don't hate me guys.
I use Hellermann Tyton exclusively for faceplates, voice & data jacks and patch panels. I've worked with alot of different types of jacks and I think that the Hellerman Tyton products aren't nearly as flimsey as other manufacturers. Wall phone & bisquit jacks are ICC
We use Siemon, Commscope, and, in a pinch, Leviton. I have used and like AMP and Hubbell, too. We don't take a chance with any no-name stuff. As far as the cost, we just mark it up in our quotes and tell customers they're getting the best. We're pretty much using only Commscope cable these days.
Here in ATT-California I use Panduit exclusively. I rather like that I can assemble it without any tool other than my ever present snips. They fit in 1, 2, or 4 hole surface mounts; 2, 3, 4, 6 hole single gang wall plates; 4-hole rectangle things that fit the cutouts in partitions and power poles; and 24 jacks across a 19 inch rack. Other than misplacing the wires, I have never had a failure of a panduit jack; out of a few thousand over more than a decade.
The above is useless for comparison, given that I have not used any other brand.
Telecommunications Installation and Repair: April 1, 1966 -- November 30, 2011