Q: Ok, here is what I have:
2000Ft Cat5e
1 set of cheapo crimpers
some unknown about RJ45 connectors
a bootleg tester
and instructions.
I not know even where to begin.
How I cut it?
Strip it?
Which the wires going to do?
Is there a tutorial somewhere?
I dropped, but before he was about 4 years since I last did it and I made only 5-6 cables.
Thanks for your time,
J
Best Answer: *Oh, I Mis-read something
Not that can think of, OtherWise the only way is Online:
http://ovguide.com/videoblogs.html
*If you run a TV transmitter within House limits, the FCC won't be an issue. But If you have a powerful TV transmitter that reaches beyond your house, you will need to know the legal requirements from the Fcc.
*You need a new transmitter for each channel, from what I re-call, although I could be wrong. The more watts a Transmitter has, the wider and stronger the network signal gets, but the more expensive it gets. You'll need big sponsors to make it more possible.
http://shop.ebay.com/items/tv-transmitteā¦
Fcc Contact: 1-888-225-5322 or http://fcc.gov
In Canada for example: You need a Permit, You pay rental fees to Industry Canada, If your making above $100,000, than the Crtc starts charging you. If your playing copyrighted stuff, you'll pay royalties and many other legal issues.
Re:The mechanical process of crinmping ends on cables IS pretty easy. The issue is that there are a number of rules and standards that must be followed to ensure proper, full performance and reliability.
Most people don't know (and don't necessarily want to know or don't know that they don't know) what the rules and standards are, and make cables that are seriously out of spec. For a home user, who cares if they only get half the performance or if it's glitchey …. for a business, there's no excuse for not doing it properly … they may think they're getting off cheap doing it themselves, but the performance loss and time wasted chasing intermittent problems more than exceeds the cost of having it done right the first time (including a certification scan).
"If the cable is funky, the network is junky"
The media is the absolute foundation of the network. If the media is bad or done poorly, it won't matter how wunnerful the equipment is, the overall network is gonna suck.
.02
Scott
Re:RE:"it's pretty easy with reasonably priced tools"
Re:FWIW, it's not always possible to buy every cable you need, especially if you're wiring an office or a house. Learning to fabricate CAT-5 cables isn't rocket science, it's pretty easy with reasonably priced tools. Sure, you'll have some mis-steps, but I think some people think it's way more difficult than it really is.
Re:RE:"It is a good exercise, provided that at the end you get few good inexpensive commercially made cables".
Well said. But let them try anyway.
Re:It is a good exercise, provided that at the end you get few good inexpensive commercially made cables.
Example:
Link: Ethernet CAT5 Patch Cables. (http://www.cyberguys.com/templates/SearchProducts.asp?search=1ca&child=1zca62&curpage=2&ureq=y)
However if you insist going your ?merry? way, this is the best guide for the task.
Link: How to make CAT5 (http://duxcw.com/digest/Howto/network/cable/cable2.htm)
Re:As long as your wiring sequence is the same on both connectors it will work as a straight through. I'd go with the T-568B sequence
Cat 5e is limited to 100 meters but don't push it.
I'm not sure what a bootleg tester is but if you have trouble getting connection look at your el cheapo crimpers.
Your crimpers should have a guide for striping the right amount off each wire and the outer casing. Be gentle or you wiil cut right throught the wire. If you mess up cut it all off and start over.
Those wires are twisted for a reason. Leave them twisted right up as far as you can.
Mac
Re:Here are two guides..
Link 1 (http://www.siriuscomputers.com/rj45.htm)
Link 2 (http://www.aptcommunications.com/ncode.htm)
Pick a standard 568A or 568B and stick with it throughout all your wiring and you can't go wrong.
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