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How to make a Cat6 Network Cable

June 22nd, 2008
Cables4Sure asked:


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Cat6 is the 6th generation of twisted pair Ethernet Cabling. Cat6 patch cables provides higher performance than Cat5e and features more stringent specifications for crosstalk and system noise. Cat6 cables and components are backward compatible with Cat5 and Cat5e.Cat6 cables will deliver stable performance to 550 Mhz. Each Cat6 cable comes UL verified, and meets EIA/TIA Cat6 TIA/EIA 568-B-2.1, draft 9 standards. Cat6 patch cables will handle Bandwidth intensive applications up to 550 Mhz and beyond and reduce both impedance and structural return loss as compared to standard 100 Mhz cable!

Connector: 50-micron gold plated RJ-45 Male to Male
Conductor: 24 AWG Stranded Copper
Jacket: PVC
Molded, Snag-Free boot prevents unwanted cable snags
Applications:
-Gigabit 1000 BASE-T; 100 BASE-T; 10 BASE-T (IEEE 802.3)

-4/16 Mbps Token Ring (IEEE 802.5); 100 VG-Any LAN

-100 Mbps TP-PMD (ANSI X3T9.5); 55/155 Mbps ATM

-Voice; T1

High bandwidth applications such as 622 ATM, Wideband
Designed For: Network Adapters, Hubs, Switches, Routers, DSL/Cable Modems, Patch Panels and other twisted-pair applications
Certifications: UL Listed
Standard: Category 6 TIA/EIA- 568-B-2.1, draft 9

Cable Modems ,

  1. michaelko000
    June 24th, 2008 at 17:55 | #1

    pair of scissors ???? use your crimping tool,which by the way cut better!!!

  2. aminex
    June 25th, 2008 at 08:07 | #2

    agreed, but crossover cables are ridiculously expensive so when i need one, of a i just make one for cheaper.

  3. Surisis1983
    June 27th, 2008 at 00:21 | #3

    You tool. They’re so damn cheap it doesn’t matter. Like i’m gonna pay for 30 dollar cable that will last 5 more months than my 8 dollar one. get outta town.

  4. Sealy1986
    June 29th, 2008 at 01:59 | #4

    Golden rule of network cabling: Only make them when absolutely nessecary. Purchasing them at a retail store is still the best method of choice for installing cable due to the increased chance of human error. Machines are far less prone to missing wiring assignments, (not wired in correct order) then we are. Plus they crimp the cable a lot better. Not to mention man-made ethernet cables are far prone to EMI then industrial ones you buy from retail store.

  5. Inni8
    June 29th, 2008 at 15:10 | #5

    Holds the wire together inside the wire? CABLE!!!

  6. billin
    July 2nd, 2008 at 02:26 | #6

    THANK YOU - helped me immeasurably!

  7. cezaxgame
    July 4th, 2008 at 10:26 | #7

    How to make a Cat6 Network Cable?? u need a cat6 cable Lmao wow

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