#11 in Remote-control extenders
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Reddit mentions of E-SDS 4K HDMI Extender, HDMI over Single CAT5E/6/7 Cable up to 230ft (1080P) 130ft(4K) Supports 4K 60Hz, 3D, 1080P, HDCP2.2/1.4,Bi-directional IR Remote CV0013

Sentiment score: 2
Reddit mentions: 6

We found 6 Reddit mentions of E-SDS 4K HDMI Extender, HDMI over Single CAT5E/6/7 Cable up to 230ft (1080P) 130ft(4K) Supports 4K 60Hz, 3D, 1080P, HDCP2.2/1.4,Bi-directional IR Remote CV0013. Here are the top ones.

E-SDS 4K HDMI Extender, HDMI over Single CAT5E/6/7 Cable up to 230ft (1080P) 130ft(4K) Supports 4K 60Hz, 3D, 1080P, HDCP2.2/1.4,Bi-directional IR Remote CV0013
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Found 6 comments on E-SDS 4K HDMI Extender, HDMI over Single CAT5E/6/7 Cable up to 230ft (1080P) 130ft(4K) Supports 4K 60Hz, 3D, 1080P, HDCP2.2/1.4,Bi-directional IR Remote CV0013:

u/Cyphersphere · 10 pointsr/sysadmin

If you are concerned with frame rate or higher resolutions get something that is "HDBaseT". I think they may need to be directly connected to each other, so keep that in mind.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0107W8UP2/

u/mercenary_sysadmin · 8 pointsr/HomeNetworking

The word you're looking for is "balun". While you can find 4K capable baluns, to the best of my knowledge none of them are passive.

Example of a balun that's exactly what you're asking for, except not passive: https://smile.amazon.com/SDS-Extender-HDBaseT-Supports-Bi-directional/dp/B0107W8UP2/

Knowing the word "balun" will get you much better search results than just putting in the cable specs (this is a search I've been down before).

What you might consider is a PoE (Power over Ethernet) balun kit. This one is pricey... but it supports 4K, and you only have to plug one side of it in (either the transmitter or the receiver) to power, and it'll power the other device over the same cat6 cable that the video signal is transmitted over. So you only need to run the single cable, and whichever end has trouble supplying power won't need it. https://smile.amazon.com/AV-Access-Extender-Uncompressed-Supports/dp/B01GYL54JK/

u/bilged · 2 pointsr/hometheater

I just bought this and installed it today and it works perfectly over Cat5e. Its replacing a cheap monoprice one that used 2x cables and failed after 4yrs.

This is the cheapest HDBaseT unit that I could find, is only powered at one end (user's choice) and has bidirectional IR hardware included. I'm very happy with it.

u/locutusofborg780 · 2 pointsr/HomeNetworking

Why not use Cat5e or Cat6a and an HDMI Balun instead? That way you won't have to replace the cable every time someone gets an itch to change the HDMI standards?

u/Drathus · 1 pointr/homeautomation

I dunno.

There's several screens out there with HDBase-T already, and it's more and more becoming a feature on "business" panels, since it makes deployment of digital signage worlds easier.

If that trend continues it'll probably make its way into "pro-sumer" and consumer goods simply as a matter of scale-of-production. Just as now we're starting to see 10Gb NICs aimed at the more tech-savy home market with ASUS' new $100 card.

Either way, for me it was an easy decision. Even for now using $100ish baluns I'm happy with what I've got. =)