Home Networking & Surveillance DIY: CAT6A Ethernet RJ45 Cable Termination Guide Featuring

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  • Опубликовано: 21 окт 2024

Комментарии • 4

  • @Phazer102
    @Phazer102 Год назад +2

    Simply some constructive criticism. It'd be helpful if you included what kind of 6A cable you're using as well as a link to the connectors. 6A can sometimes be... fun to find crimp connectors for because the OD varies so much. Looks like the max OD for the connectors you're using is 7.4mm, they do make some others that go up to 8mm OD so that's cool you can basically do any cable I've worked with with 8mm OD.

    • @audioexperience
      @audioexperience  Год назад

      thanks for watching and sharing your comment - should you need any product in this video or any related product please simply contact us and we can provide all of it for you! the email is sales@audioexperience.net or you may call 203-808-6991
      for networking, Audio Experience uses and sells exclusively ICE cable and simply45 connectors / tools

  • @aauren
    @aauren Год назад

    Thanks for putting this together, some neat tricks there like using the jacket to untwist the wires fast. I also like how you straighten the individual wires.
    One thing that I've found works really well with passthrough connectors is to push them through until the jacket enters the connector, like you do, and then use my flush cuts to trim them as close to the connector as you can. Then pull the exposed wires back into the connector just a little bit before you crimp it.
    Doing it this way keeps you from needing the black bar that you used on the plus connections, and it also keeps the wires from smushing together at the end like sometimes happens on pass through connectors when you cut and crimp them in one pass. Before I started doing it this way I had a few cables that wouldn't test out when I finished them because the cut off ends were connecting.

    • @audioexperience
      @audioexperience  Год назад

      you're so welcome - glad it helped!
      that is a good trick - i would imagine it requires some finesse as you'd need to that enough to get the benefit you're speaking of but not too much as to avoid having lack of contact when plugged in