No. It is only for an analog phone line for a fax machine. The cable allows me to patch an analog phone line through an existing Ethernet cable infrastructure.
I have a router who have the coaxial conectar for the internet but the issue is I only have the RJ 11 source at home ... Do you have any ideas for making is working by any modifications or converter please ??
What make/model of RJ11 connector did you use? CAT5 cable is pretty thick (about 0.2" diameter), and I've tried putting an RJ11 connector on round cable that was only 0.175" thick and the opening in the back was too small to allow the outer insulation to push far enough into it to get a good strain-relief crimp. The connector I used was supposedly for round cable (rather than flat), but it still didn't work well. The outer insulation pulled out of the strain-relief crimp in short order.
@@billylaguardia Awesome, thanks! Ideal's official website even says they are specifically "for Cat 3/5e and traditional phone wire," and the picture shows them attached to CAT5 cable. I wonder if they make a 6P4C version, though, even if they don't, I suppose it doesn't hurt anything to have two extra unused contacts (I want to use them to make an ordinary line cord for a telephone). Edit: Yes, they do make a 6P4C version, part number 85-344.
Omg thank you! Why can't anybody else teach this way? Any pointers for locating an analog phone demarc that has no punchdown block? lol. Two other questions though: 1) being OCDish, is the Ethernet cable jacket fitting properly in the smaller RJ11 connector square hole? (providing strain relief, but not overly crowded). 2) Your heatshrink labels. Do you actually shrink them onsite or do you just keep them able to move along the cable?
Hey J, the Ethernet jacket fits great! I was using cat5e cable for this project with thinner more flexible jacketing (vs cat6). The label maker I use is battery powered, I add the labels on site.
The pinout should work as shown, here are a few important things to keep in mind: 1. A rj11 plug will fit in a rj45 jack. You should be able to use a rj11 cable. 2. Make sure that the jack you are plugging into is patched into an analog phone line.
I have a regular phone line that has my interest going through it. The colors are red, green, black and white. They are connected to the old style connector that is round and has the 4 screws with the red, green, yellow and black wires attached. From there it goes to the back of the wall plate we’re the Rj45 connects. I want change out the wall plate and have one with the connector plugging right into the back of the wall plate and eliminate the round connector with screws because I have a patch cable going to another room and I need to use this box. I don’t know how to connect the 4 wires. The black, white, green and red to the rj11 so that it will match the cat 5 on the other side of wall plate.
Thanks Billy. 2 years later and this is still helping folks
This video saved me hours today! Thank you so much Billy!
Haven't had to mess with RJ11 in so long but of course had to fix something this morning in a rush. Thanks for the great video!!!
I would still need a DSL Splitter, if I want to receive signal from my rj11 port used for telephone and internet in the past?
Thanks for the tutorial
How to do it for an rj11 with only 2 pins?
Same thing on the other side right? I have cat 5 through a wall and I want to pass the analog phone line through it to another room.
how about rj45 to rj11 using cat6 for ip phone..what is the colour code?😅
In your cable, will it be able to use in internet connection?
No. It is only for an analog phone line for a fax machine. The cable allows me to patch an analog phone line through an existing Ethernet cable infrastructure.
I have a router who have the coaxial conectar for the internet but the issue is I only have the RJ 11 source at home ...
Do you have any ideas for making is working by any modifications or converter please ??
can this still work through a phone jack outlet and get ethernet connection into the PC? or do you have another video that deals with that?
Hello my line on the street comes with 2cables i think its rj9? how to i connect the rj45 on it?
Pls is the RJ11 a 6P4C or a 6P6C type?
If the rj11 patch cable can fit in an rj45 jack why does this even need to be done?
What make/model of RJ11 connector did you use? CAT5 cable is pretty thick (about 0.2" diameter), and I've tried putting an RJ11 connector on round cable that was only 0.175" thick and the opening in the back was too small to allow the outer insulation to push far enough into it to get a good strain-relief crimp. The connector I used was supposedly for round cable (rather than flat), but it still didn't work well. The outer insulation pulled out of the strain-relief crimp in short order.
They are Ideal 85-345 RJ-116P6C.
@@billylaguardia Awesome, thanks! Ideal's official website even says they are specifically "for Cat 3/5e and traditional phone wire," and the picture shows them attached to CAT5 cable.
I wonder if they make a 6P4C version, though, even if they don't, I suppose it doesn't hurt anything to have two extra unused contacts (I want to use them to make an ordinary line cord for a telephone).
Edit: Yes, they do make a 6P4C version, part number 85-344.
Omg thank you! Why can't anybody else teach this way? Any pointers for locating an analog phone demarc that has no punchdown block? lol. Two other questions though: 1) being OCDish, is the Ethernet cable jacket fitting properly in the smaller RJ11 connector square hole? (providing strain relief, but not overly crowded). 2) Your heatshrink labels. Do you actually shrink them onsite or do you just keep them able to move along the cable?
Hey J, the Ethernet jacket fits great! I was using cat5e cable for this project with thinner more flexible jacketing (vs cat6). The label maker I use is battery powered, I add the labels on site.
@@billylaguardia no I mean do you have a heat gun that you bring to site and shrink your label into the cable jacket?
@@JWolff-md3ij indeed, I keep a heat gun in my toolbox specifically for the labels.
can i do the opposite ? i mean rj11 to rj45??
But how do you go from phone to ethernet my modem has rj11 jack but I am running a cat6 for phone and ethernet
The pinout should work as shown, here are a few important things to keep in mind: 1. A rj11 plug will fit in a rj45 jack. You should be able to use a rj11 cable. 2. Make sure that the jack you are plugging into is patched into an analog phone line.
Can u send it to me???
thank you. salamat
568B starts with white/orange stripe 🎉😂
Thanks👍🏻
I have a regular phone line that has my interest going through it. The colors are red, green, black and white. They are connected to the old style connector that is round and has the 4 screws with the red, green, yellow and black wires attached. From there it goes to the back of the wall plate we’re the Rj45 connects. I want change out the wall plate and have one with the connector plugging right into the back of the wall plate and eliminate the round connector with screws because I have a patch cable going to another room and I need to use this box. I don’t know how to connect the 4 wires. The black, white, green and red to the rj11 so that it will match the cat 5 on the other side of wall plate.
Bruh, the cable is not blue with a white stripe it's white with a blue stripe.