Thanks for the video, I make up cables with one piece rj45 connectors everyday, just encounterd these when a friend bought them and asked me to make the connection for him. WHAT WAS THE ENGINEER WHO DESIGNED THESE THING THINKING 🤔 HE SHOULD FIND ANOTHER OCCUPATION
They have made some changes over the years. The "sled" does not seem to be tapered any more and end piece does not allow the wires to pass thru anymore. P.S. You do not need a tri pod to have a tripod. I use a modified mic stand.
This is the best video about this connector on youtube! Can I use this connector for CAT5e cables? I have a home network and I'm having contact issues so I want to change the connectors to CAT6 with the intention of having more durable connections. The separators are good because they keep the twisted pairs in the correct position until just before the connector blades.
Oi mate. Great video. I found it because I'm trying to make my own very short patch cables for runs between my patch panel and switch, and I searched for "Ideal CAT6 8P8C" which is the product I'm using...but it doesn't work like it does in your video. The slide liner on the model I'm using does allow the individual wires to pass through it such that the wires must be trimmed before putting on the liner and pushing it down to the sled. As you can imagine, this makes it rather difficult to line up the wires into the right slots. Got any ideas? Did I get a faulty product or is this on purpose? From what i can tell from the included instructions, this is how it's designed. I like yours better. Please help if you can.
Hi: I haven't found the connectors like these anymore. The ones I use are similar, but do not have the little plastic separator in the middle. On these I have to pull and stretch all the while bending side to side to get the twists out. Then I trim them even with the crimp tools cutter, and carefully slide the connector on. I try to drag the wires into the connector, sliding them on the flat inside. One face might have grooves to hold the wires straight. Once you get use to it, it's faster than the ones in this video, for me, anyway. Good Luck!
Yeah....after two hours of putzing around and wasting 8 or 10 connectors, I finally got it down. I still think the pass through version would be easier but I still haven't found the right pair of snips to trim the wires down close enough for that to be viable. Haha. So I guess this model is the one I'm gonna use. thanks for the video and the reply.
So the subject line says CAT6 but the first thing out of the guys mouth is "This is a CAT5 cable". Why can't people put out videos that even match the title with the description???
This is CAT5 cable, and the connectors are for CAT6. The CAT6 cable I’ve seen has individual channels in the jacket for each pair for more spacing and less cross-talk. Quite more expensive, too.
@@IGoProEVERYTHING It's not a cross over if both sides match, thats a straight through cable. The pinout of a crossover is TIA/EIA 568A on one side, and TIA/EIA 568B on the other. It maps out like this pin 1 > 3 pin 2 > 6 pin 3 > 1 pin 4 > 4 pin 5 > 5 pin 6 > 2 pin 7 > 7 pin 8 > 8
Thanks for the video, I make up cables with one piece rj45 connectors everyday, just encounterd these when a friend bought them and asked me to make the connection for him. WHAT WAS THE ENGINEER WHO DESIGNED THESE THING THINKING 🤔 HE SHOULD FIND ANOTHER OCCUPATION
Looks easier than it is
It’s really down to the connector, if it’s a good quality connector the easier it is
Your workmanship looks very good
They have made some changes over the years. The "sled" does not seem to be tapered any more and end piece does not allow the wires to pass thru anymore.
P.S. You do not need a tri pod to have a tripod. I use a modified mic stand.
TRIED ONE OF THESE FOR THE FIRST TIME TODAY - WONT BE USING THEM AGAIN ANY TIME SOON!
Very nice and easy way to make understand evertthing thanks alot
Hard working man hands.
This is the best video about this connector on youtube! Can I use this connector for CAT5e cables? I have a home network and I'm having contact issues so I want to change the connectors to CAT6 with the intention of having more durable connections. The separators are good because they keep the twisted pairs in the correct position until just before the connector blades.
I don’t see these type CAT 6 connectors anywhere, but they’ll go on CAT5 cable.
Also, CAT 5 is supposedly good for about a hundred meters. I’ll bet CAT6 at gigabit is shorter than that..
obrigado
tks
Oi mate. Great video. I found it because I'm trying to make my own very short patch cables for runs between my patch panel and switch, and I searched for "Ideal CAT6 8P8C" which is the product I'm using...but it doesn't work like it does in your video. The slide liner on the model I'm using does allow the individual wires to pass through it such that the wires must be trimmed before putting on the liner and pushing it down to the sled. As you can imagine, this makes it rather difficult to line up the wires into the right slots. Got any ideas? Did I get a faulty product or is this on purpose? From what i can tell from the included instructions, this is how it's designed. I like yours better. Please help if you can.
Hi: I haven't found the connectors like these anymore. The ones I use are similar, but do not have the little plastic separator in the middle. On these I have to pull and stretch all the while bending side to side to get the twists out. Then I trim them even with the crimp tools cutter, and carefully slide the connector on. I try to drag the wires into the connector, sliding them on the flat inside. One face might have grooves to hold the wires straight. Once you get use to it, it's faster than the ones in this video, for me, anyway. Good Luck!
Yeah....after two hours of putzing around and wasting 8 or 10 connectors, I finally got it down. I still think the pass through version would be easier but I still haven't found the right pair of snips to trim the wires down close enough for that to be viable. Haha. So I guess this model is the one I'm gonna use. thanks for the video and the reply.
Seems like 8 years ago it was hard to get soap
OK , GOOD ,
Will never use this type/ model of connector, just stick to the one piece RJ45 connector , why add more parts... bad idea.
Asmr warning ****
Que uñas más sucias..pero buen video.
So the subject line says CAT6 but the first thing out of the guys mouth is "This is a CAT5 cable". Why can't people put out videos that even match the title with the description???
This is CAT5 cable, and the connectors are for CAT6. The CAT6 cable I’ve seen has individual channels in the jacket for each pair for more spacing and less cross-talk. Quite more expensive, too.
incorrect cross over, green and orange pairs swap, blue and brown stay the same.
as long as both ends are the same it will work. Also he said it is the "B" orientation.
@@IGoProEVERYTHING It's not a cross over if both sides match, thats a straight through cable. The pinout of a crossover is TIA/EIA 568A on one side, and TIA/EIA 568B on the other. It maps out like this
pin 1 > 3
pin 2 > 6
pin 3 > 1
pin 4 > 4
pin 5 > 5
pin 6 > 2
pin 7 > 7
pin 8 > 8
worse connector EVAH!
Catch your breath geezzz
Clean those fingernails.