Robert, I will try to address your question and also your comments. There are a lot of myths floating around on the internet regarding these category of cables, and I will try to dispel some of them.
Also you are severely limiting good answers with this question in your unwillingness to
install any fiber.
“I've had a look at patch panels and sockets - I did not find any that support S/FTP specifically. They are either for shielded or un-shielded cables, no matter if SUTP, FUTP, FFTP, etc. 10Gb-Base-T network equipment however, all seem to support shielding (again no difference between types of shielding). “
Answer: S/FTP and F/UTP Patch panels are readily available. You are not going to find them along side any retailer that's selling consumer grade network gear. Additionally, you may not find CAT-8 anything that's in your budget range. CAT-8 is being used in data-centers currently and isn't necessarily considered for consumers at this time. You can also terminate the drain wire to a grounded bus at each end of the cable if the equipment doesn't internally shield.
https://www.blackbox.com/en-us/store/Detail.aspx/CAT7-Patch-Panel---1U-24-Port/JPM10GF24
Regarding speeds I want to run - well let me preface with: I don't want to replace the cabling for a long time. So 10Gb/s is in focus, because that's now the standard for 6a and it is in a reasonable price range right now - switched, for a reduced number of ports. But there is no limit for me personally. I'd rather not replace the whole cabling, rather upgrade the network equipment over the years/decades and who is to say that maybe in 10, 15 or more years it will be possible to use 6a for higher rates, say 25 Gb/s or 40 Gb/s ? Cat 5e is even said to be able to handle 10Gb/s on short runs
Answer: if you don't want to replace you're cable for a long time then install (CAT-8 class 1) it still uses RJ-45, not a cabling standard from ten years ago.(2008 - Cat 6A standards – ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.2-10)
the speeds to come are determined by the bandwidth of the cable, and it most likely will not be supporting higher speeds. Just like everyone had to move to CAT5e from CAT-5 to support 1Gbps. Whoever said cat-5e can handle 10Gbps has a fundamental misunderstanding of copper telecommunications practices. Even if a link was negotiated at both sides for 10g it wouldn't come close to that actual throughput. (this can be verified with a fluke networks cable analyzer.)
Cat7 to Cat 8 is actually bad advice, in my opinion. It is not readily available, and incredibly expensive at the moment. Additionally, it is not fully certified: ISO might certify it as inter-operable with SFTP Cat7A cables, so it might be a waste of money. However, in a kind of vice-versa twist, Cat7A is not certified by ANSI/TIA-568. Additionally, they are only certified for 40 Gb/s at ~30m max. Then there is the connector that is used with Cat7 onwards: GG45.
Answer: You are confusing category of cable with class of cable, in 2016, the IEEE 802.3bq working group ratified the amendment 3 which defines 25Gbase-T and 40gbase-T on Category 8 cabling specified to 2000 MHz. (ANSI/TIA 568-C.2-1 ) While it is true that these speeds have strict limitations on distance (you didn't tell us the length of your home end to end.) if your new home is farther then the apx 90ft limitations you would install the desired cabling on the two half's of the house that do meet the requirement, and use a fiber solution to connect the two distribution ends.
Forget CAT-7 (Class F Augmented) , no one jumped on the bandwagon. And as a result it will most likely go the way of the beta-max. Category 8 connectors use the 8-pin modular (RJ45) connector, and are fully backward compatible with previous categories. Category 8 cabling can support data speeds of 10Gbps and lower at a full 100m (328’) Channel configuration. All of the cabling types are readily available, they may just not fit into your project budget. There is also an ISO Category 8.2 (Class II system) under development. It’s based on the Category 7A system specified in ISO 11801 2nd edition. Various connectors may be used for a Class II system; it is not clear whether a choice will be made to select a single connector. Backward compatibility with RJ45 is not assured, and would most likely require a hybrid patch cord. I would personally lean on replacing wall outlets and connectors rather than tearing my homes dry-wall apart to re-run All of my cabling.
"TIA and ISO standards provide one additional step for the grounding of screened and shielded cabling systems. Specifically, clause 4.6 of ANSI/TIA-568-B.1 and clause 11.3 of ISO/IEC 11801:2002 state that the cable shield shall be bonded to the TGB in the telecommunications room, and that grounding at the work area may be accomplished through the equipment power connection."
Additionally, don't have electricians install this. if its not terminated and grounded properly you may as well put Cat-5 in the walls. go with someone who knows how to terminate CAT-6A and above, and has a cable analyzer to test and prove the installation afterwards. Someone BICSI certified can handle this, but needs to have adequate experience and knowledge of telecom grounding (ANSI-J-STD-607-A-2002).
With all this being said there is a very good white paper on the subject published by Valerie Rybinski titled: “Screened and Shielded Cabling: Noise Immunity, Grounding, and the Antenna Myth.”
further, it has been converted into laymen terms by numerous articles and cabling authors. Before reading it, i would recommend you take a refresher on these terms:
Common-mode vs. differential-mode, Ground loops, Signal to noise, Shannon capacity
The myths and realities of shielded, screened cabling
i hope this helps you in your future-proofing, if i missed anything that anyone notices. please let me know. i will update the answer.
References:
https://www.belden.com/blog/digital-building/get-to-know-category-8-cabling
http://www.flukenetworks.com/knowledge-base/applicationstandards-articles-copper/category-8-cabling-fact-sheet
http://www.datacottage.com/nch/cablinghist.htm#.Wo3AiXxG0mg
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO/IEC_11801#Category_7A
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO/IEC_11801#Category_8
http://www.cablinginstall.com/articles/print/volume-23/issue-10/features/data-center/category-8-questions-answered.html
http://www.cablinginstall.com/articles/print/volume-15/issue-7/features/design/the-myths-and-realities-of-shielded-screened-cabling.html
https://diy.stackexchange.com/questions/86061/are-cat-5-sockets-compatible-with-cat-7-cable
Bit of googling explained the prefix at least: U = unshielded F = foil shielding S = braided shielding (outer layer only) – djsmiley2k TMW – 2018-02-15T14:45:23.720
Is cost an issue? – mtak – 2018-02-15T14:46:36.523
@djsmiley2k I know what the prefixes mean, but what do they translate to in the real world ? would S/FTP be better then F/FTP ? – Robert Riedl – 2018-02-15T14:46:40.353
@mtak cost is not an issue (within reason) – Robert Riedl – 2018-02-15T14:47:15.270
If you're going to put multiple cables in a duct for longer runs and want to do 10G over them, your minimum requirement should be F/FTP. Personally I would go for S/FTP because of the cost difference, and if I only get 8G over some links, so be it. Make sure you get copper core cable, none of this copper cladded aluminium (CCA)! – mtak – 2018-02-15T14:51:06.333
@mtak so F/FTP is superior ? what about F/STP or S/STP ? – Robert Riedl – 2018-02-15T15:00:34.290
@RobertRiedl I'd suggest putting that into your question, as not everyone wants to google what they all mean. That said, anyone who should be able to answer should know what they mean anyway... – djsmiley2k TMW – 2018-02-15T15:22:14.667
@djsmiley2k, I've added a table of the common acronyms and their meaning (sadly, no markdown for tables) – Robert Riedl – 2018-02-15T16:12:25.417
For your underground runs, you must either put them in watertight conduit, or use "direct bury" rated cable. – I say Reinstate Monica – 2018-02-15T17:21:54.690
1
Must-watch talk on this subject: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=0xSA0ljsnjc - basically 10gig to the home is hard.
– davidgo – 2018-02-15T18:22:10.250@davidgo thank you for this talk ! I wouldn't say "basically 10gig to the home is hard" -its just expensive at the moment. Short of server hardware as a router, things like MACCHIATObin Double Shot cost about 10x what the average router costs today, but it offers 10x+ speeds. As I said in my post, I want the cabling to be future proof, as far as it will be able to handle 10GbE. PCIe Network cards, are as expensive, see ~100$ ASUS CG-C100C or Gigabyte GC-AQC107.
– Robert Riedl – 2018-02-19T12:06:54.020