I was given the task of (re)organizing cables in one of our racks, and I have never done this before. What system/equipment do you use to organize your cables?
- The rack I have is 23" and has 19" equipment installed in it.
- Not all equipment has power and ethernet on the same side
- We have a 48 port forward facing switch in the rack
- We have ~25 Ethernet and fiber cables coming in from above.
- The rack is a 42U
- We have about 8 bulky power converters to deal with
- we have about 15 devices needing power
- We have 2 2U UPS devices at the bottom of the rack
- We have 2 front facing PDU's
- We have more horizontal cable management things than I can count...
- This rack handles the backbone of the network
I have found that velcro is the best for holding cables in bundles. The trick to any cable management is that you want to make sure that you leave enough room to keep from stressing any connection point. When done correctly the cable harness should help keep your connections solid more than try to pull them out. Use lot's of velcro avoid sip ties. If you are making a cable harness for something that is semi-permanent it may be worth your time to label both ends of the cable in case of having to replace a piece of equipment. In my opinion the question you are asking yourself in order of importance is.
The single most important thing you can do is document whatever you decide to do.
After that its mostly dealing with aesthetics and efficently routing your cables as it sounds like you've got most everything you'll need. I generally prefer to put the heavy things on the bottom, UPS then servers, and the network equipment on the top, switches and whatnot. Oh and make sure you get some of these things for your big power bricks.
Short Answer, Zip Ties.
We basically just tie them to the rack and bundle them all together. Even with different types of equipment if you do a good enough job labeling then you should be fine. Here's a good example of a before and after of a server room. I found this slideshow a while ago and I use it when I explain cable management: http://www.techrepublic.com/photos/server-room-cabling-nightmare/6137