Glad i found your video. I was in question if reworking both ends if I do them exactly the same or mirror them. Glad I waited until the end! Very informative!
Great Video, would be so much nicer to make my own... So much easier looking than I thought it would be. Is it good practice to push on the cable while crimping?
My question is what difference does it make concerning the wire color order in a connector just as long as you put the wires in the same order on the second connector to match the wires in the first connector.
Yes, as long as all the wires match on both sides it should work, but the wires are grouped by color pairs for a reason - it helps with noise resistance.
i just matched wires in same way followed by first jack like 👇 w/green solid green, w/blue solid blue, w/orange solid orange w/brown solid brown and it works perfectly. let me know whats the basic term for changing different colors?
Good deal. The order of the colors is often referred to as “wire mapping “. For instance the are a few wire maps used in telecommunications such as TIA568A, TIA568B, and USOC . Hope that answers your question. 😄
There’s some legacy compatible reasons why they chose the TIA-568B pattern. It shows up when you’re working with 8 pair cables for telecom applications.
They don’t *HAVE* to be. So long as all of them are long enough inside the plug to make contact with the gold pins. But ideally, yes you would want them all to be the same length.
Economics, my friend. If you are a managed service provider and your SLA only requires you to maintain a customer network at 1Gbps, then cat5e is the cost efficient choice. I am not saying I like the idea. I am just telling you how it is. 😃
@@NetworkAdvisor your crimper looks like a pass through crimper. if you look on the vack side and there is a blade it will trim pass through crimps. thats the only difference is trimming the wires on pass through crimper's vs non pass through crimper's.
Hi,sir i explained you my old modem is configured to WiFi router it mean my old router is configured to WiFi access point simple word how to used cable straight & cross cables connectors RJ-45 my cable is CAT 5e replay me ?????
Very good video. Good explanation. Easy to undestand
Great video. Very clear and easy to understand with good quality video. Please make more. Thank you
Glad i found your video. I was in question if reworking both ends if I do them exactly the same or mirror them. Glad I waited until the end! Very informative!
Very clean! Definitely thumbs up!
Well, thank you! ☺️
U make it look easy
great compliment!
very basic and very easy to understand...thank you
+Home Care Technology thanks for your feedback. glad to help. 😀
thanks man. awesome vid
Glad you liked it!
Great Video, would be so much nicer to make my own... So much easier looking than I thought it would be. Is it good practice to push on the cable while crimping?
Great video. Thanks for the instruction.
+SyberPrepper good to hear from you again. Thanks for the feedback. :-)
What sense does it make to mix blues and greens??? WO/O, WBL/BL, WG/G, WBRN/BRN seems like there would be less room for error.
There are reasons for backward compatibility (legacy). And, noise suppression.
Please post more videos, doesn't matter if they're just vlogs while you work.
what tools can i substitute if there is no crimping tools available?
WO+O, WG+Blue,WBlue+G, WBr+Br
568b
Greenpair+blue+orange+brown 568a
👍👍👍
My question is what difference does it make concerning the wire color order in a connector just as long as you put the wires in the same order on the second connector to match the wires in the first connector.
Yes, as long as all the wires match on both sides it should work, but the wires are grouped by color pairs for a reason - it helps with noise resistance.
Awesome channel!
i just matched wires in same way followed by first jack like 👇
w/green solid green,
w/blue solid blue,
w/orange solid orange
w/brown solid brown
and it works perfectly.
let me know whats the basic term for changing different colors?
Good deal. The order of the colors is often referred to as “wire mapping “. For instance the are a few wire maps used in telecommunications such as TIA568A, TIA568B, and USOC . Hope that answers your question. 😄
Thank you
If we change the position of blue pair and orange pair
Like 1st pair blue then orange ,green, brown
There’s some legacy compatible reasons why they chose the TIA-568B pattern. It shows up when you’re working with 8 pair cables for telecom applications.
Got a good source of colored cable? Need red, green, orange and yellow. Got some but it sucks!
Do the copper ends need to be uniformed? Some of mine are a little longer but they all reach the pins.
They don’t *HAVE* to be. So long as all of them are long enough inside the plug to make contact with the gold pins. But ideally, yes you would want them all to be the same length.
best
For me to to find this quicker 5:59
Is there ANY reason an installer should still be using CAT 5e??
Economics, my friend. If you are a managed service provider and your SLA only requires you to maintain a customer network at 1Gbps, then cat5e is the cost efficient choice.
I am not saying I like the idea. I am just telling you how it is. 😃
Wow thanks for the tutorial. What about CAT7?
i suck at putting rj45 connectors so i use pass through connectors.
I’ve never tried those but been curious. 🤔
@@NetworkAdvisor your crimper looks like a pass through crimper. if you look on the vack side and there is a blade it will trim pass through crimps. thats the only difference is trimming the wires on pass through crimper's vs non pass through crimper's.
I see. Well. I will have to get some pass-thru crimp ends and give that a try. 🤔
Remember doing this back in shop, everyone including myself sucked at it. 😐
Hi,sir i explained you my old modem is configured to WiFi router it mean my old router is configured to WiFi access point simple word how to used cable straight & cross cables connectors RJ-45 my cable is CAT 5e replay me ?????
WO+O, WG+Blue,WBlue+G, WBr+Br
You flew through the test. You didn’t explain the lights
oh, sorry about that. this video covers that tester a bit more in depth.
Cable Tester ua-cam.com/video/Le72u_OpwF0/v-deo.html