Does anyone have any experience with Honeywell structured wiring enclosures?
I'm currently having a home built, and the builder insists any wiring that happens be done by their wiring sub (as opposed to me). The Wiring Sub wrote up a proposal with all of my requests on it - one of which was for a couple of empty cans to be used as tel/cable demarc, and another as the home run for all of the Cat6 runs.
Anyway, on his proposal, it specifies Honeywell cans. I did a few searches (Pics of these things are somewhat hard to come by) and I'm concerned by the 'holes' or fastening system along the back of the can.
Pics of Honeywell Cans
Anyway, from most of what I've seen on this site and others, structured wiring enclosures usually have a fastening system that looks like a few vertical rows of round holes (instead of these stupid slots). I'm assuming nothing I get to put into one of these Honeywell things will fit correctly. Can anyone verify this? Are these enclosures largely standardized? Or am I mistaken, and each manufacturer has their own set of crazy standards?
Any help or clarity on this issue is greatly appreciated.
I'm currently having a home built, and the builder insists any wiring that happens be done by their wiring sub (as opposed to me). The Wiring Sub wrote up a proposal with all of my requests on it - one of which was for a couple of empty cans to be used as tel/cable demarc, and another as the home run for all of the Cat6 runs.
Anyway, on his proposal, it specifies Honeywell cans. I did a few searches (Pics of these things are somewhat hard to come by) and I'm concerned by the 'holes' or fastening system along the back of the can.
Pics of Honeywell Cans
Anyway, from most of what I've seen on this site and others, structured wiring enclosures usually have a fastening system that looks like a few vertical rows of round holes (instead of these stupid slots). I'm assuming nothing I get to put into one of these Honeywell things will fit correctly. Can anyone verify this? Are these enclosures largely standardized? Or am I mistaken, and each manufacturer has their own set of crazy standards?
Any help or clarity on this issue is greatly appreciated.