Affordable C2G / Cables to Go 27355 Cat5E UTP Solid PVC CMR-Rated Cable, White (500 Feet/152.4 Meters)

C2G / Cables to Go 27355 Cat5E UTP Solid PVC CMR-Rated Cable, White (500 Feet/152.4 Meters)Buy C2G / Cables to Go 27355 Cat5E UTP Solid PVC CMR-Rated Cable, White (500 Feet/152.4 Meters)

C2G / Cables to Go 27355 Cat5E UTP Solid PVC CMR-Rated Cable, White (500 Feet/152.4 Meters) Product Description:



  • CMR-rated for in-wall and conduit use; foot-marked cable in easy-to-use pull box
  • 4-pair unshielded twisted pair (UTP) cable
  • 24 AWG solid bare copper conductor
  • High density polyethylene insulation, PVC jacket
  • CM/CMR-Rated-rated for use in walls and conduit in ceiling

Product Description

With voice, data and security capabilities, our Cat5E bulk cable is ideal for network installation in your home, office, or on the entire campus. Foot-marked cable is packaged in an easy-to-pull box for easier installation. Meets or exceeds Cat5E specifications. 4-pair unshielded twisted pair (UTP) cable, 24 AWG solid bare copper conductor and made with high density polyethylene insulation, PVC jacket. CM/CMR-Rated-rated for use in walls and conduit in ceiling. Verified compliant with EIA/TIA standards by ETL and CSA-listed.

Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews

21 of 23 people found the following review helpful.
5Cable Running/home network tips
By Troy
I haven't purchased this cable, but I've installed cable professionally for years and have moved up to where I'm ordering data circuits for our company of 40,000+ employees, so I wanted to share a few tips for the lay person doing small installs or home installation. That, and I thought I'd make some notes for others while I'm looking for parts for my own home network.There are higher quality standards beyond cat 5e, but unless you are running a larger professional grade network, Cat 5e is plenty. If you are doing a home network and money is tight, you could use Cat 5 or even Cat 3 cable. Cat 3 is technically voice telephone cable and lower quality and shouldn't be used for data cable, but if you're pinching pennies, it will get the job done. - You can generally buy cable in 500' and 1000' rolls. When measuring the amount of cable you need, be sure to also count the 10' or so you'll have on both ends running up and down the walls. - ***Run your longest runs first*** When you get to the end of a box, you'll be more likely to use the last little bit on a short run, where if you do your short runs first, you'll have a lot more waste ($$$). - Try not to run your data cables parallel to electrical cables when going through the ceiling - the data cable will pick up interference...the longer the parallel run, the more interference, which means a possible decrease in performance. Try to stay about 36" or more away from electrical wires (running down a wall to a data jack shouldn't matter too much if you have no other options). Interference is a magnetic thing, and wooden studs do not really effect magnetic fields, so keep that in mind. - The above also goes for fluorescent lights...they produce a LOT of electrical interference, especially as they get older. - Patch panels and data jacks have two termination options, 568A and 568B. As long as you use the same standard on both ends, it does not matter which you use, although outside of federal buildings, typically the 568B standard is used the most. - Leave a small service loop at the patch panel and a little slack at the jack - if your first attempt doesn't work, you'll need some slack to work with to terminate your patch panel or jack again. Also, be very careful when scoring the jacket cover to expose the cables inside. If you nick one of the wires, don't risk it, go another 1" to 1 ½" down the cable and try again. Cable is thin and if you nick the cable, it is easy to break the wire and not notice and end up with a faulty connection. - Professionally, your cable run should be less than 328' (which works out to 100 meters). The 328' includes the patch cords at each end. A professional cable tester (such as Fluke meters) will automatically fail anything past 328', although connections past 328' will work...but the natural cable resistance and electrical interference from surrounding wire becomes more noticeable on longer runs. Most cable is marked in feet every 2', so it's easy to gauge your length. - If you need to run much past 328', you may need to boost your signal. A cheap powered hub can often do the trick - although you may need to check the hub to see if you need to wire one side as a cross over cable.Mounting bracket - there are a ton of options when it comes to brackets for these types of low voltage brackets. Over the years my favorite was the MP1P, similar to the one below (also the least expensive on Amazon in this class of bracket at the time I wrote this). If you look closely there are four tiny raised spots on the corners of the bracket. Place the front side of the bracket against the wall, preferably lining it up with a small level roughly 18" from the floor at the bottom of the bracket, and push where these four raised spots are located. Pushing on these spots leaves a tiny indentation in the sheetrock which are your guide to cutting the hole in your wall for your outlet...just use the edge of your level or the edge of the bracket and draw your lines from point to point, and when you cut out the hole, barely include the lines in the cut and you will have a snug fit. There are ratcheting plastic backs that you cannot really see in the picture, but you can ratchet these tight with just your fingers. I suggest not using screws as often screws will just cause the small piece of sheetrock between the screw and the existing hole to break. Being plastic, there are not sharp edges to cut yourself or the cable, so it's a win-win there.http://www.amazon.com/MP1P-Non-Metallic-Single-Mounting-Bracket/dp/B0076AYP1C/ref=sr_1_13?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1361315890&sr=1-13&keywords=mp1pMy favorite voice or data jack is HellermanTyton (one word). I used these for years and had no problems that I can recall, and they are about 25% cheaper than Levington jacks, and a midrange price. Many jacks (such as Levington) have non-flat bottoms so your jack will either need a little mount to stick the jack in while terminating the jack, or you will need to hold it and the non-flat bottom means the jack may roll while you punch down the wire, and take my word for it, it can make a nasty little cut on your hand when this happens. With the flat bottoms of the HellermanTyton jacks, once you have the wires laid into the jack, you can place it against the wall and since the bottom is flat, it will not leave indentations on the wall as you terminate the wires, and is less likely to roll if you hold it with your fingers.If you are running voice, fax and data jacks, the voice jacks are typically the same color as your faceplate, and fax and data jacks are colored for easy recognition. If memory serves me well, I think typically faxes were blue and data jacks were orange or red.[...]You will need a patch panel to terminate your cables at your router, cable modem, DSL modem etc. If you are doing a small installation, I'd suggest a 12 port patch panel similar to the one linked below. Once you mount the bracket, you can place the patch panel in the bracket in reverse and terminate the cables, then rotate the patch panel 180 degrees and mount it normally and attach your patch cords. The patch panel below was one of the lower priced at the time and had excellent reviews.[...]

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful.
5IT Guy Approves
By Wesley Davis
The wire is a little stiffer than some of the cable I'm used to and that makes it much easier to arrange the cables before I slide it into the end connectors. Small wire colors are standard. I am the IT guy for a high school and I make a lot of cable to replace damaged computer-to-wall jack cables of varying size and it's very helpful to be able to just make the size of cable I need.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
3Spool is cool but yipes, stripes
By R. Buck
The cable is spooled in the box so that it easily unwinds as it is pulled out. What I don't like is that the white-stripes are quite thin making it difficult to distinquish between solid colored and white-striped wires. It's therefore difficult to verify RJ45 wiring pin placement when attaching an RJ45 connector.

See all 57 customer reviews...


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Buy C2G / Cables to Go 27355 Cat5E UTP Solid PVC CMR-Rated Cable, White (500 Feet/152.4 Meters)

Cheapest Where the Wild Things Are: Max and Goat Boy

Where the Wild Things Are: Max and Goat BoyBuy Where the Wild Things Are: Max and Goat Boy

Where the Wild Things Are: Max and Goat Boy Product Description:



  • Where the Wild Things Are : Max and Goatboy

Product Description

Where the Wild Things Are : Max and Goatboy

Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews

8 of 9 people found the following review helpful.
5Straight out of the the book... "I'LL EAT YOU UP!"
By A Customer
This is an amazingly well done version of Max, the King of the Wild Things. The figure is sculpted perfectly down to the whiskers of his wolf suit and scratch pen marks just like Maurice Sendak's wonderful drawings. Max is caught in his classic pose creating mischief of one kind and another. He comes with a base, scepter and has a removable crown; so you can show off the ears of his wolf suit. Goat boy is just as nice with his scruffy beard and horns.

These figures are rather limited to their poses shown here (which are wonderful) and work best when held tight in their forest floor stands. The arms and legs do move around, but look best as designed. This toy is better suited to be set up and looked at on a book shelf, mantle, or desk. And is NOT well too suited for play in the sandbox or to battle with other action figures.

And of course Max is the centerpiece of the whole Where the Wild Things are collection from McFarlane toys, which are all just as fabulous. Enjoy this toy and make sure to share it and the book with a younger friend; it is still one of my very favorites. (Thanks Mom for reading it to me as a kid.)

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
5Let the wild rumpus start with the king of all wild things.
By Armando N. Roman
There's nothing new to say here- as with my other Wild Thing figure reviews, this set's stupendous. Max and Goatboy are probably the most sought-after, because of Max, and just like the others, they're worth the price (as long as it's not super expensive). Getting these figures in the mail put a big smile on my face, and took me back to the days when I wanted that wolf costume. Oh hell, I -still- want that wolf costume!Max looks great, though the only minor problem is that his face looks a bit chubby. 'no big deal though, because anyone who sees this figure and knows the book will instantly recognize him. The McFarlane masters did a great job sculpting him in his wild pose, and because of how his tail rests on the ground, Max can stand up on his own. He has plastic wire whiskers, and a crown and scepter that you can decorate him with. He has slight articulation at the tail, arms and leg. Goatboy is just as good, and you gotta love the eyes on him. He's easily the smallest of the Wild Things, and much lighter as well. Mine hasn't broken, and I haven't read anything on him breaking for anyone else. He can also stand on his own. Both of course have the scratched ink style on them as well.Max though, also has one big problem with how he was made, and it's the same thing as the other big Wild Things- he breaks very easily. You'd think that since he's smaller, that wouldn't be a problem, especially since Goatboy's a little bigger, and has no problems. Nope. My Max's tail broke off during shipping, and was floating around in the box. I glued it on with no problem, but it broke again after a few weeks. His left arm also broke right at the point of articulation and needed repairing as well. While Mcfarlane sculpted all of these perfectly, I don't get what happened with the quality of the plastic.Just keep an eye out for Max as a whole, and you're good to go with these guys! When they first came out, they were already a good deal since you're getting two figures for the price of one, and it's still a good deal. It's just too bad Goatboy can't ride Aaron!

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Compare Prices for C2G / Cables to Go 27351 Cat5E UTP Solid PVC CMR-Rated Cable, Blue (500 Feet/152.4 Meters)

C2G / Cables to Go 27351 Cat5E UTP Solid PVC CMR-Rated Cable, Blue (500 Feet/152.4 Meters)Buy C2G / Cables to Go 27351 Cat5E UTP Solid PVC CMR-Rated Cable, Blue (500 Feet/152.4 Meters)

C2G / Cables to Go 27351 Cat5E UTP Solid PVC CMR-Rated Cable, Blue (500 Feet/152.4 Meters) Product Description:



  • CMR-rated for in-wall and conduit use; foot-marked cable in easy-to-use pull box
  • 4-pair unshielded twisted pair (UTP) cable
  • 24 AWG solid bare copper conductor
  • High density polyethylene insulation, PVC jacket
  • CM/CMR-Rated-rated for use in walls and conduit in ceiling

Product Description

With voice, data and security capabilities, our Cat5E bulk cable is ideal for network installation in your home, office, or on the entire campus. Foot-marked cable is packaged in an easy-to-pull box for easier installation. Meets or exceeds Cat5E specifications. 4-pair unshielded twisted pair (UTP) cable, 24 AWG solid bare copper conductor and made with high density polyethylene insulation, PVC jacket. CM/CMR-Rated-rated for use in walls and conduit in ceiling. Verified compliant with EIA/TIA standards by ETL and CSA-listed.

Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews

21 of 23 people found the following review helpful.
5Cable Running/home network tips
By Troy
I haven't purchased this cable, but I've installed cable professionally for years and have moved up to where I'm ordering data circuits for our company of 40,000+ employees, so I wanted to share a few tips for the lay person doing small installs or home installation. That, and I thought I'd make some notes for others while I'm looking for parts for my own home network.There are higher quality standards beyond cat 5e, but unless you are running a larger professional grade network, Cat 5e is plenty. If you are doing a home network and money is tight, you could use Cat 5 or even Cat 3 cable. Cat 3 is technically voice telephone cable and lower quality and shouldn't be used for data cable, but if you're pinching pennies, it will get the job done. - You can generally buy cable in 500' and 1000' rolls. When measuring the amount of cable you need, be sure to also count the 10' or so you'll have on both ends running up and down the walls. - ***Run your longest runs first*** When you get to the end of a box, you'll be more likely to use the last little bit on a short run, where if you do your short runs first, you'll have a lot more waste ($$$). - Try not to run your data cables parallel to electrical cables when going through the ceiling - the data cable will pick up interference...the longer the parallel run, the more interference, which means a possible decrease in performance. Try to stay about 36" or more away from electrical wires (running down a wall to a data jack shouldn't matter too much if you have no other options). Interference is a magnetic thing, and wooden studs do not really effect magnetic fields, so keep that in mind. - The above also goes for fluorescent lights...they produce a LOT of electrical interference, especially as they get older. - Patch panels and data jacks have two termination options, 568A and 568B. As long as you use the same standard on both ends, it does not matter which you use, although outside of federal buildings, typically the 568B standard is used the most. - Leave a small service loop at the patch panel and a little slack at the jack - if your first attempt doesn't work, you'll need some slack to work with to terminate your patch panel or jack again. Also, be very careful when scoring the jacket cover to expose the cables inside. If you nick one of the wires, don't risk it, go another 1" to 1 ½" down the cable and try again. Cable is thin and if you nick the cable, it is easy to break the wire and not notice and end up with a faulty connection. - Professionally, your cable run should be less than 328' (which works out to 100 meters). The 328' includes the patch cords at each end. A professional cable tester (such as Fluke meters) will automatically fail anything past 328', although connections past 328' will work...but the natural cable resistance and electrical interference from surrounding wire becomes more noticeable on longer runs. Most cable is marked in feet every 2', so it's easy to gauge your length. - If you need to run much past 328', you may need to boost your signal. A cheap powered hub can often do the trick - although you may need to check the hub to see if you need to wire one side as a cross over cable.Mounting bracket - there are a ton of options when it comes to brackets for these types of low voltage brackets. Over the years my favorite was the MP1P, similar to the one below (also the least expensive on Amazon in this class of bracket at the time I wrote this). If you look closely there are four tiny raised spots on the corners of the bracket. Place the front side of the bracket against the wall, preferably lining it up with a small level roughly 18" from the floor at the bottom of the bracket, and push where these four raised spots are located. Pushing on these spots leaves a tiny indentation in the sheetrock which are your guide to cutting the hole in your wall for your outlet...just use the edge of your level or the edge of the bracket and draw your lines from point to point, and when you cut out the hole, barely include the lines in the cut and you will have a snug fit. There are ratcheting plastic backs that you cannot really see in the picture, but you can ratchet these tight with just your fingers. I suggest not using screws as often screws will just cause the small piece of sheetrock between the screw and the existing hole to break. Being plastic, there are not sharp edges to cut yourself or the cable, so it's a win-win there.http://www.amazon.com/MP1P-Non-Metallic-Single-Mounting-Bracket/dp/B0076AYP1C/ref=sr_1_13?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1361315890&sr=1-13&keywords=mp1pMy favorite voice or data jack is HellermanTyton (one word). I used these for years and had no problems that I can recall, and they are about 25% cheaper than Levington jacks, and a midrange price. Many jacks (such as Levington) have non-flat bottoms so your jack will either need a little mount to stick the jack in while terminating the jack, or you will need to hold it and the non-flat bottom means the jack may roll while you punch down the wire, and take my word for it, it can make a nasty little cut on your hand when this happens. With the flat bottoms of the HellermanTyton jacks, once you have the wires laid into the jack, you can place it against the wall and since the bottom is flat, it will not leave indentations on the wall as you terminate the wires, and is less likely to roll if you hold it with your fingers.If you are running voice, fax and data jacks, the voice jacks are typically the same color as your faceplate, and fax and data jacks are colored for easy recognition. If memory serves me well, I think typically faxes were blue and data jacks were orange or red.[...]You will need a patch panel to terminate your cables at your router, cable modem, DSL modem etc. If you are doing a small installation, I'd suggest a 12 port patch panel similar to the one linked below. Once you mount the bracket, you can place the patch panel in the bracket in reverse and terminate the cables, then rotate the patch panel 180 degrees and mount it normally and attach your patch cords. The patch panel below was one of the lower priced at the time and had excellent reviews.[...]

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful.
5IT Guy Approves
By Wesley Davis
The wire is a little stiffer than some of the cable I'm used to and that makes it much easier to arrange the cables before I slide it into the end connectors. Small wire colors are standard. I am the IT guy for a high school and I make a lot of cable to replace damaged computer-to-wall jack cables of varying size and it's very helpful to be able to just make the size of cable I need.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
3Spool is cool but yipes, stripes
By R. Buck
The cable is spooled in the box so that it easily unwinds as it is pulled out. What I don't like is that the white-stripes are quite thin making it difficult to distinquish between solid colored and white-striped wires. It's therefore difficult to verify RJ45 wiring pin placement when attaching an RJ45 connector.

See all 57 customer reviews...


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Buy C2G / Cables to Go 27351 Cat5E UTP Solid PVC CMR-Rated Cable, Blue (500 Feet/152.4 Meters)

Price Comparisons of HP Deskjet 950c - Printer - color - ink-jet - Legal - 600 dpi x 600 dpi - up to 11 ppm (mono) / up to 8.5 ppm (color) - capacity: 120 sheets - Parallel, USB

HP Deskjet 950c - Printer - color - ink-jet - Legal - 600 dpi x 600 dpi - up to 11 ppm (mono) / up to 8.5 ppm (color) - capacity: 120 sheets - Parallel, USBBuy HP Deskjet 950c - Printer - color - ink-jet - Legal - 600 dpi x 600 dpi - up to 11 ppm (mono) / up to 8.5 ppm (color) - capacity: 120 sheets - Parallel, USB

HP Deskjet 950c - Printer - color - ink-jet - Legal - 600 dpi x 600 dpi - up to 11 ppm (mono) / up to 8.5 ppm (color) - capacity: 120 sheets - Parallel, USB Product Description:



  • Full functions obtained with Windows XP.

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Most helpful customer reviews

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
5HP Deskjet 950c - Printer
By Carol S. Englehart
I purchased this item in 2001 and I have not had any problems with it at all. It works fabulously and I use it all the time. It was worth every penny I spent for it. Good job HP.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
5Collected 4 of these printers over the years
By S. Starks
It is March 2013 and I have numerous 950c printers. I really love this printer. I do have an HP Officejet and a HP Laserjet Printer. The 950c is much better than the new Officejet printer because I don't have to deal with 4 dif't ink cartridges and the old deskjet just seem like a much tougher printer and sadly the quality of the print is better on the 950c deskjet than the new Officejet, which is ridiculous knowing that the printers are about 15 years apart in age. The deskjet is slower, but when printing at home, who cares about time cause I can send stuff to the printer and do something else. NOW THE PRICE OF INK: I only purchase remanufactured or compatible ink cartridges. My 950c needs a 45 (black) and a 78 (tri-colored). I can purchase both cartridges from Amazon for under $20 and I choose the 98xl cause it can print up to 900 colored copies. My Officejet is rarely used because of the ink. the ink goes fast and it takes 4 cartriges, which can be purchased from Amazon for about $40 for all four. I just am not satisfied with the print quality and how the ink goes fast and don't like having to think about 4 dif't cartridges.Of course my Laserjet is wonderful...fast, beautiful quality printing, and the ink last a while. I do use my Laserjet for professional looking documents. I can purchase all 4 toners for under $75 on Amazon. However, the deskjet comes in handy for saving my toner since it is higher. If I have to print 400 programs. I will print 200 on my deskjet and 200 on my laserjet....reason because deskjet ink price is dirt cheap and tryingt to conserve my toner usage.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
5Still going after 17 years
By Sakakawea
My first printer and still going strong, has outlasted three other printers since 1996. I purchased this as my first printer with my first computer and it still works like a top.

See all 4 customer reviews...


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Buy HP Deskjet 950c - Printer - color - ink-jet - Legal - 600 dpi x 600 dpi - up to 11 ppm (mono) / up to 8.5 ppm (color) - capacity: 120 sheets - Parallel, USB