Data Center Structured Cabling Installation

Fiber and Copper Built to Last

Cabling is the most invisible part of a data center — until it fails. Intermittent link errors, unexplained packet loss, connectors that work until they don’t. Most of these problems trace back to installation shortcuts that seemed fine at the time: cables pulled too tight, improper terminations, connectors not seated fully, labels that faded within a year.

What Emergency Deployment Means

Complete fiber and copper infrastructure designed for your current load and your anticipated growth. Backbone fiber runs between distribution points. Horizontal copper from patch panels to rack positions. Proper cable pathways, management hardware, and containment. Professional labeling. Comprehensive testing with documentation for every run.

The topology design matters as much as the installation. A cable plant designed for today that requires complete rework in two years is a project done wrong. We design for growth.

What's Included

Standards We Follow

1

Compute

Cisco UCS, Dell PowerEdge, HPE ProLiant, Supermicro, blade chassis, GPU clusters (NVIDIA DGX, HGX configurations)

2

Storage

Dell EMC Unity and PowerStore, NetApp AFF/FAS, Pure Storage FlashArray, HPE Nimble, IBM FlashSystem

3

Network

Cisco Nexus and Catalyst, Juniper QFX and EX, Arista 7000 series, firewall appliances (Palo Alto, Fortinet, Check Point)

Not on this list?

We’ve likely worked with it. We’re platform-agnostic — what matters is installing correctly and testing thoroughly.

FAQ

Common Questions

Every cable. Every fiber gets OTDR tested in both directions. Every copper run gets full Cat6A performance certification. No sampling, no spot-checking.
We re-terminate and re-test until they pass. Our target is 100% first-time pass rate. Failed cables get fixed before we leave — not flagged for someone else to deal with.

We use machine-printed labels rated for the environment. Not hand-written, not printed on standard office label stock. Labels that are still readable and adhered years later.

Yes, and we should. Topology design includes capacity planning — pathways, panel positions, and cable counts that accommodate growth without requiring full rework.