Here, instead of a network switch, we use a device called a patch panel. The LAN cables will enter this panel from the rear entry, due to which the cables will not be visible to anyone. They come in a range of sizes, and are typically mountable, whether that's on a wall, or on a rack to make for easier. A patch panel, including fiber patch panels and Ethernet patch panels, is a passive network device that centralizes, terminates, and organizes multiple copper or fiber cables. Serving as the interface between permanent cabling and active equipment, it provides clearly labeled ports that make. In the real world—wiring closets, server racks, and busy data centers—your patch panel is where Ethernet performance, labeling discipline, and day-2 operations collide. Choose the wrong type and the network may still pass traffic, but maintenance gets slower, moves/adds/changes get messy, and the. A patch panel is one of those components that is easy to overlook when planning a network — it does not switch, route, or process data, and to the uninitiated it can look like an expensive way to add an extra set of connectors between the cable and the switch. It is a crucial component in the cable management subsystem, serving as the hub for interconnecting the vertical backbone and horizontal cabling subsystems.