For this you need your local electrical code. Doing it any other way is not advised.
As to the shield, why is that needed? Twisted pair naturally rejects picked up noise. I find shielded cables to be a source of trouble rather than avoiding trouble. Pretty weird what happens IRL.
I am extending a home computer network about 100 feet to a workshop. The 110v, three phase power will also be run as well.
There will be about a 4” separation going through the foundation. Separate PVC conduit is in the foundation for each.
I am hoping to use cat6 or 6a shielded cable from a network switch in the house to a wireless router or another network switch in the workshop. I understand how the foil shield/drain wire connects to the metal on the RJ45 plug/Keystone connector. So… my questions.
Is electrical ground then achieved thru the device that the ethernet cable is plugged into?
Do both ends need to be grounded?
Do the devices at both ends need to be grounded?
Are all devices with ethernet plugs compatible with grounded RJ45s?

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