Cable tracing and labeling
Find every endpoint, remove abandoned runs, and create naming that matches how the site actually works.
Physical systems, made legible
Cable Lab documents, rebuilds, and hardens the real-world layer behind devices, sensors, studios, test benches, and small industrial IoT fleets.
Services
Each engagement ends with a clean map, a labeled physical layer, and maintenance notes written for the people who inherit the system.
Find every endpoint, remove abandoned runs, and create naming that matches how the site actually works.
Turn ad-hoc hubs, adapters, sensors, and power into a repeatable layout with known failure points.
Re-space, re-route, and document cabinets so cooling, access, and service loops are no longer afterthoughts.
Measure where dropouts start, separate physical faults from software noise, and leave a repeatable test plan.
Produce field maps, port schedules, photos, QR labels, and service notes that technicians can use immediately.
Move promising one-off builds into durable wiring, power, and enclosure patterns without losing speed.
Process
We do not beautify chaos. We identify the system boundary, prove each run, then rebuild only what the evidence supports.
Photograph, tag, and log every visible device, cable, port, adapter, and power dependency.
Confirm endpoints, load, continuity, radio placement, and intermittent failure conditions before moving anything.
Route for access, strain relief, airflow, service loops, and clear labels instead of surface-level neatness.
Deliver maps, photos, label schedules, test notes, and a one-page recovery path for the next technician.
Field notes
“Cable Lab gave us a map clear enough that a new tech fixed a sensor issue without calling the original installer.”
“The rack did not just look cleaner. The failure pattern disappeared because the power and signal paths finally made sense.”
Questions
For physical rewiring, yes. For documentation cleanup or remote diagnosis, a photo set and short video walkthrough can start the work.
No. We specify hardware only when the current setup cannot meet the maintenance or reliability target.
A cable map, port schedule, labeled photos, issue log, maintenance notes, and a short priority list for future improvements.
Small studios, labs, field pilots, maker spaces, prototype rooms, specialty retail, and compact industrial sites are the best fit.
Start
Share what is failing, what changed recently, and whether the system is in production or still on the bench.