I can’t thank you enough for the second fix. I had a 50m+ outdoor cat 6 cable running to my outdoor office and the cable snapped. I managed to apply the second fix and now the internet is back. No latency issues at all
My Goodness! I'm over the moon that your instructions worked the first try. I was expecting glitches if it did work but the connection is clean and smooth. Thank you very much, Caramba Hacks! You've saved me valuable time and money.
This video is so helpful! It's the perfect example of everything you shouldn't do with network (or any other type of) cable, and shows why, if you don't have the tools or know how, to get someone who does to do it.
Agreed! The cable slice at 4:00 is the perfect way to take a 10M cable and turn it into a telco wire! WTF was that mess? I was trying to find a video that shows how cable (zip) ties if pulled too hard will cause issues at higher transmission rates, but then I found a guy who is "splicing" a LAN cable with some form of a Western Union splice (which was not done correctly. ) How do I explain to students that the LAN cable is important to can cause issues when some clown puts this up on UA-cam. Unless I missed that the professor is hurt and Gilligan is trying to impress Mary Ann, that would explain everything.
OmG....I wish, I found this yesterday.. I really needed this video. I had to run all new cable and cost me $80. Crap - I could of fixed for "FREE" !!! This video will be burned in my head for-ever !! Thank you !!!
@@cyyborgg You can't join an ethernet cable like it was an electric cable, ethernet protocol at speeds 100 mbps or 1000mbs is very sensible to changes on the twisting, to changes on conductivity etc... it works at very high frequency. The video solution might work at a times, but not at other times. Your best way would be replace whole cable, if that's not an option, attach a female onnector on one end, and a male connector on the other end and connect it.
Just did it and it worked!(the second tutorial) Thanks a lot!! It took a while and it wasn't as clean-looking as yours but it works just as good. A tip for any fellow attempting it, avoid my mistake and instead try to cut equal lengths on each side. It will be easier when you are twisting the cables together.
Wow! Thanks for the vid, specially the 2nd part. Our dog bite & cut my Internet cable and you saved my job from home during this pandemic. Big thanks from 2020!!! 😁👍
WOW... what a concidence... my internect doesn't really work because my spaniel dog bit the cable, and he literally also bit my charger for my apple mac...
@@lualalanaufahu9384 Speed was okay but it stopped working after 2 months and I had to cut it shorter and redo it. It is just a temporary solution but if there's no other way it at least works.
Thanks a lot! I made a mistake in the beginning, assuming that always similar colors belong next to each other. I can recommend anyone having trouble really checking the right order!
Thank you so much, my cabel broke and I worried I would have to buy a new one, but thanks to you I was able to fix it. I'm really glad that I found your guide.
first i want to say thanks bro tanks so much and may GOD bless you man,like i fixed the cable and its now working on using the second tutorial thanks man
Each pair of wires are twisted internally (called twisted pair) so that data can transfer with minimal interference. The explanation in the second part of the video MAY cause slower connection speed. This probably won't matter for most people (because you don't get close to the maximum transfer speeds normally), but for some it will matter greatly.
@@afnanqureshi803 yes.. 1 tip apply part 1 , 2 tip need a rj 45 female box.. for each join your signal attenuates, but it works ..the part 2 Is a disaster!
Used the second part of the video but with tiny heat shrink tubing over each twisted pair and then a karger sleeve of heat shrink over the lot. Worked like a charm, I needed to make a custom cable for a telescope controller, so the pairs were specific to that application.
When splicing a cable together, it is best to use a keystone and an rj45. Twisting bare copper together will cause latency loss which will effect network speeds. Electricians do this all the time and I have to follow behind and fix them. All in all, if your home run gets chewed in the center. Just buy a new pre-terminated cat5/6 cable or buy cat5/6 cable and terminate it yourself. Youll thank me later when your loading issues on your favorite streaming service work properly.
i thought you were going to re-use the terminal, you proved your point. 2nd pt *that's a nice little trick* i've used twist caps when combining 3 cables, didn't have a RJ45 Splitter plus was doing it on my own home and not a whole network. got internet excellent connection working. if data has been affected no one has noticed. all our devices are hard wired now, our wireless signal working beautifully
I just used ordinary scotch tape hehehe cuz we ran out of electrical tape. Did the same procedure as shown on the second method, everything worked perfectly. Thanks!
Very good, my puppis have cut my workstation internet cable thst cut my working computer out of the net (45ft distance and no Wifi on the computer, you saved my day man!
very nice video, thank you for sharing us! I skipped the first part of the video as i didn't have a new connector. So my cable was broken by the connector, and i had an old cable with a right connector.. I cut off, and link just like in the video. Works like a charm! :D
Great also to use the second tip to create a longer cable out of two cables. Who doesn't have a bunch of cables that are just a little bit to short to be useful. Then you can use the cut-off to repair a cable where the clip is damaged.
literally thank you my dog ATE my cable that goes into my wall from the outside. I’m over here freaking out about getting a repairman because my mom works from home so no internet is BAD
Problem 2 is me. I didn't think about bending the wires back and taping around the cords. I've spliced and put ethernet cords back together but it didn't look nowhere near this neat. Clearly wasn't thinking outside the box. Thanks for the video.
Hey I just cut a cat5 cable,your vid save the day!!! I thought I had to wait for cable company to come n fix it plus charge me for cut it🤪 I was doing some lite demo next to it,just did what you did.thanks man!!!
There are special joiners for the 2nd part of the video. I was kinda worried how he was bending the wires and taping them up. The bends can add noise to your signal, not to forget you're compromising the integrity of the cable connection itself. When you bend metals like that, they're prone to snapping/breaking if done too much or repeatedly bent. As well as the fact they are no longer twisted pairs. Honestly, I believe just capping the ends and add a coupler to bridge the cables is far more efficient than doing a manual splice like that. Less errors may occur, and reduce the risk of degradation; at least a lot more with a basic coupler vs manual joining with tape.
I agree....as a network professional, this video made me cringe. I'll admit that the "repair" will most likely work in the short term but given the types of environments where that damage would normally occur, this is just not a good permanent solution.
@@dciii5847 We twist ethernet copper cables all the time, like in this video. No problems for many many years. Cable Cat5E, length 50-100 meters, reaching 1gbps without a problem. No latency drops. Telephones, television and all sorts of equipment works without a problem 10+ years.
I can’t thank you enough for the second fix. I had a 50m+ outdoor cat 6 cable running to my outdoor office and the cable snapped. I managed to apply the second fix and now the internet is back. No latency issues at all
Very helpful video my dog bit my wire, second part of the vid was very helpful.
Dil Goon did it work for you? my dog bit mine and it hasn’t worked
Haha my puppy just devoured mine!
I thought I was alone....
same issue man @Dil Goon, I first thought i have to buy a new one
What with our dogs and cable wires.
My Goodness! I'm over the moon that your instructions worked the first try. I was expecting glitches if it did work but the connection is clean and smooth. Thank you very much, Caramba Hacks! You've saved me valuable time and money.
Thanks mam
0:00 😅 0:00 0:00
This video is so helpful! It's the perfect example of everything you shouldn't do with network (or any other type of) cable, and shows why, if you don't have the tools or know how, to get someone who does to do it.
Agreed! The cable slice at 4:00 is the perfect way to take a 10M cable and turn it into a telco wire! WTF was that mess? I was trying to find a video that shows how cable (zip) ties if pulled too hard will cause issues at higher transmission rates, but then I found a guy who is "splicing" a LAN cable with some form of a Western Union splice (which was not done correctly. ) How do I explain to students that the LAN cable is important to can cause issues when some clown puts this up on UA-cam. Unless I missed that the professor is hurt and Gilligan is trying to impress Mary Ann, that would explain everything.
@@whatsup1831 What is a better way to fix it?
@@jayzn1931 Put a plug and connector on the two ends or replace the cable.
Ok, fuckbag. Privilege us with your college knowledge.
OmG....I wish, I found this yesterday.. I really needed this video. I had to run all new cable and cost me $80. Crap - I could of fixed for "FREE" !!! This video will be burned in my head for-ever !! Thank you !!!
un burn it, the 2nd part of the video is very wrong.
@@benjaznow atleast 1st part isnt sht
@@benjaznow how so? I'm planning to do the same to fix my ethernet cord
@@cyyborgg You can't join an ethernet cable like it was an electric cable, ethernet protocol at speeds 100 mbps or 1000mbs is very sensible to changes on the twisting, to changes on conductivity etc... it works at very high frequency. The video solution might work at a times, but not at other times. Your best way would be replace whole cable, if that's not an option, attach a female onnector on one end, and a male connector on the other end and connect it.
Just did it and it worked!(the second tutorial) Thanks a lot!! It took a while and it wasn't as clean-looking as yours but it works just as good. A tip for any fellow attempting it, avoid my mistake and instead try to cut equal lengths on each side. It will be easier when you are twisting the cables together.
Wow! Thanks for the vid, specially the 2nd part. Our dog bite & cut my Internet cable and you saved my job from home during this pandemic. Big thanks from 2020!!! 😁👍
WOW... what a concidence... my internect doesn't really work because my spaniel dog bit the cable, and he literally also bit my charger for my apple mac...
The second one worked for me.
I didn't want to fiddle with the tiny box endings so I tried the second solution and the cable worked.
Good tutorial.
How has the internet speed holding up now?
@@lualalanaufahu9384 Speed was okay but it stopped working after 2 months and I had to cut it shorter and redo it. It is just a temporary solution but if there's no other way it at least works.
took me like 2hrs accidentally cutting the wires but FINALLY did it THANKS.
Why 2 hrs ?
Thanks a lot! I made a mistake in the beginning, assuming that always similar colors belong next to each other. I can recommend anyone having trouble really checking the right order!
You are amazing and just saved me a week of non-paid vacation from work! Thank you so so so much!
Great it actually works
Here after I had cut my cat 5e cable and came to this video right here and it worked
Thank you so much, my cabel broke and I worried I would have to buy a new one, but thanks to you I was able to fix it. I'm really glad that I found your guide.
Omg I can’t believe it worked it’s like a magic trick and I saved 50$ on a $50 cord thank you so much!
Great video. I had problem 2 and followed your instructions. Problem solved! Thank you for your help.
commenting by using it fixed my cutted cable u saved me man
first i want to say thanks bro tanks so much and may GOD bless you man,like i fixed the cable and its now working on using the second tutorial thanks man
Each pair of wires are twisted internally (called twisted pair) so that data can transfer with minimal interference. The explanation in the second part of the video MAY cause slower connection speed. This probably won't matter for most people (because you don't get close to the maximum transfer speeds normally), but for some it will matter greatly.
Will the speed difference be noticeable? Please help..!! If it does, then any other suggestion?
Of course... the twisted fix is completely destroyed, the noise and diaphony introduced making this are unable data tx AND rx ..
@@afnanqureshi803 yes.. 1 tip apply part 1 , 2 tip need a rj 45 female box.. for each join your signal attenuates, but it works ..the part 2 Is a disaster!
Totally agree with you, also you could have random disconnects. Crazy thing to do with a UTP cable. Don’t do it!
@@benjaznow Interesting that you did not call it a LAN cable or Ethernet cable.
Very useful video. I rarely find useful video recommendations on UA-cam.
3 years later and this it’s still helpful in 2021 thx a lot it help
Used the second part of the video but with tiny heat shrink tubing over each twisted pair and then a karger sleeve of heat shrink over the lot. Worked like a charm, I needed to make a custom cable for a telescope controller, so the pairs were specific to that application.
What size tube did you use? 1mm or 2mm
We're going to need a continuity test after that second one 😂
Wow. It worked.. I feel like an it guy
@@bonfacembatia3757 it ppl dont repair cables that are damadged in the middle
@@adizivojevic8635 at least at home
@@adizivojevic8635 And if an IT ppl see's that it's repaired that way, they would get really angry to the electrician... really.
@@benjaznow Gotta link to a better method?
When splicing a cable together, it is best to use a keystone and an rj45. Twisting bare copper together will cause latency loss which will effect network speeds. Electricians do this all the time and I have to follow behind and fix them. All in all, if your home run gets chewed in the center. Just buy a new pre-terminated cat5/6 cable or buy cat5/6 cable and terminate it yourself. Youll thank me later when your loading issues on your favorite streaming service work properly.
@jayliquori2222 terminating a cable is a couple of cents, at least in my country.
We twist ethernet copper cables all the time, like in this video. No problems for many many years. Cable length 50-100 meters.
i thought you were going to re-use the terminal, you proved your point.
2nd pt *that's a nice little trick*
i've used twist caps when combining 3 cables, didn't have a RJ45 Splitter plus was doing it on my own home and not a whole network. got internet excellent connection working. if data has been affected no one has noticed. all our devices are hard wired now, our wireless signal working beautifully
Brilliant. Well done MacGyver !!!
I just used ordinary scotch tape hehehe cuz we ran out of electrical tape. Did the same procedure as shown on the second method, everything worked perfectly. Thanks!
Thank UA-cam very much. I have 28 cables to fix like this way.
I can confirm this works just need alot of patience
Great. I always step on them and need to start reparing them myself without buy "expensve" tools.
Saved me $25! Thanks!!
Very good, my puppis have cut my workstation internet cable thst cut my working computer out of the net (45ft distance and no Wifi on the computer, you saved my day man!
very nice video, thank you for sharing us!
I skipped the first part of the video as i didn't have a new connector. So my cable was broken by the connector, and i had an old cable with a right connector.. I cut off, and link just like in the video. Works like a charm! :D
It worked dog chewed on my cable 2nd part of the video was great help.
It was a LOT harder than it looks, but i managed to pull it off. Thanks for the tutorial!
Did the internet speed drop down after this process?
@@cyyborgg My internet was already bad so it didnt really changed anything. I just fixed the cable
@@asadaduf how far long did it manage to work or is still working?
@@cyyborgg Still working. It was a bit challenging but i had no problem with it once im done
thank you!!!, i just repaired my cable with your help! 😊
part 2: very smart solution. Thank you !!!
Great also to use the second tip to create a longer cable out of two cables.
Who doesn't have a bunch of cables that are just a little bit to short to be useful.
Then you can use the cut-off to repair a cable where the clip is damaged.
literally thank you my dog ATE my cable that goes into my wall from the outside. I’m over here freaking out about getting a repairman because my mom works from home so no internet is BAD
This is my EXACT situation right now! Internet service person cant come out for a week! I am doing this as we speak!
Took two tries, but it worked. Thanks!
Thank you very much .. you just save me today .It is so helpful video .
I like that 80's porn music
Dude and those hands haha
Nice video, my Ethernet cable was recently cut so I will be trying this then I get home
Thanks and good luck.)
Second part of the videos was a savior!
My rabbit decided to go through my ethernet cable...option 2 is a life saver!
Muchas gracias, me ayudó a resolver mi problema. Dios te bendiga.
Many many thanks to you and your labour.
In lockdown and no one to repair the Ethernet wire thnx very much
This cable fix/hack worked, thank you. I subbed
Thanks a lot. So does meen, its working alsow without profesional Tools
Problem 2 is me. I didn't think about bending the wires back and taping around the cords. I've spliced and put ethernet cords back together but it didn't look nowhere near this neat. Clearly wasn't thinking outside the box. Thanks for the video.
Hey I just cut a cat5 cable,your vid save the day!!! I thought I had to wait for cable company to come n fix it plus charge me for cut it🤪 I was doing some lite demo next to it,just did what you did.thanks man!!!
A nail went through the cable but it still works really well - not tempted to fix it this way - but it is certainly an option :)
Thanks bro you really don't knkw what you have did for me
This is one super tutorial ever 💪🏾 thanks
tysm man my ethernet wire was ripped in half and did exactly what you did in the 2nd part and it worked perfectly thanks again c:
OMG just did the second part was prepared to buy a new one THANK YOU SOO MUCH
Very Helpful video Thanks.😁👍
Hey man just did this now becuz my ping and pocket lost so high thank you so much dude!
Awesome and easiest explanation
Wow very easy and quick fix. Thanks for the video.
Took a long god damn time, but I did it! Cheers to me. Thanks for the video brother.
You saved me bro thank you very much
Super helpful! I wonder who else is here because of their puppy...
I'm here because of rats bit my cable hahaha
Thank you so much my puppy tore it apart and your vid helped soo much.
Same here
Such a great second tutorial
Bro you saved my life thanks
Thanks for the second part❤️❤️
You're a life saver bro thank you so much it worked perfectly for me....
Is this legit sir? It work?
It did 100%
@@jesusbladimir tnx it's works now.
Just want you to know, it works, the 2nd one, thank you
OK ! GOOD JOB ! MANY THANKS.
BIG THANKS MY FRIEND!
Thanks a lot! It works :) Love from Reunion Island
It was a nice idea and i have to say it help me to complete my work..
+Chibuzor Promise glad that helped
Very interesting. Thanks. I've done a similar thing but crimping or using a rj45 inline coupler is another option.
There are special joiners for the 2nd part of the video. I was kinda worried how he was bending the wires and taping them up. The bends can add noise to your signal, not to forget you're compromising the integrity of the cable connection itself. When you bend metals like that, they're prone to snapping/breaking if done too much or repeatedly bent. As well as the fact they are no longer twisted pairs. Honestly, I believe just capping the ends and add a coupler to bridge the cables is far more efficient than doing a manual splice like that. Less errors may occur, and reduce the risk of degradation; at least a lot more with a basic coupler vs manual joining with tape.
I agree....as a network professional, this video made me cringe. I'll admit that the "repair" will most likely work in the short term but given the types of environments where that damage would normally occur, this is just not a good permanent solution.
@@dciii5847 We twist ethernet copper cables all the time, like in this video. No problems for many many years. Cable Cat5E, length 50-100 meters, reaching 1gbps without a problem. No latency drops. Telephones, television and all sorts of equipment works without a problem 10+ years.
Thank you, this was very helpful.
Thank u so much very easy and nice trick Mashallah
Nice tips. Thanks.
awesome guide dude, even more awesome music, cant even find it anywhere well done!
On God I start freestyling n everything
Muchas gracias!! Súper útil funciona a la primera 😊😊😊😊
It worked, just plug your lan cable properly.
thanks man!!!
great and useful video!!!
good job👍👍👍👍
Yes best giude ever, i agree!
i comment on very few videos. you rocked man
Perfect job ,,, so admire specially using normal tools
You’ve just earned a new subscriber☺️💯💪🏻🔥😎
Good luck with your performance issues in the future
My dog chewed my cord . Tomorrow morning is the 2k tournament . This shit literally saved my life . Thank you . I wish I could like this bitch TWICE
you made it look so easy! Thank you!
Thanks for this video, helped me a lot!
great technique!
Fantastic. Thank you for sharing
Thanks for the usefull video, you helped me out
THANKS FOR THE HELP
Simple enough thanks 🙏
Thank you! It works.
thanks, it worked
Thanks, you saved my day.
I got a tournament in a game coming up and this helped me so luch
"Best Guide Ever" that's 100% true! ;-)