Cable Color Codeing
HOW TO MAKE YOUR OWN CAT
5
TWISTED-PAIR NETWORK CABLES
The two most common unshielded twisted-pair (UTP) network standards are the10 Mhz 10BASE-T Ethernet and the 100Mhz 100BASE-TX Fast Ethernet. The 100BASE-TX standard is quickly becoming the predominant LAN standard. If you are starting from scratch, to build a small home or office network, this is clearly the standard you should choose. This article will show you how to make cables which will work with both standards.
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LANS
SIMPLIFIED. A LAN can be as simple as two computers, each
having a network interface card (NIC) or network adapter and running network
software, connected together with a crossover
cable.
The next step up would be a network consisting of
three or more computers and a hub. Each of the computers is plugged into
the hub with a straight-thru cable (the crossover function is
performed by the hub).
NETWORK CABLE
AND CONNECTORS


Stranded wire patch cables are often specified for cable segments running from a wall jack to a PC and for patch panels. They are more flexible than solid core wire. However, the rational for using it is that the constant flexing of patch cables may wear-out solid core cable--break it. I don't think this is a real concern in the average small network. For example, I have one solid core cable going to my work bench. It has probably flexed and average person's lifetime of flexes from the many many times I have connected customer computers to my network. Also, stranded cable is susceptible to degradation from moisture infiltration, may use an alternate color code, and should not be used for cables longer than 3 Meters (about 10 feet).
Most of the wiring I do simply connects computers directly to other computers or hubs. Solid core cable is quite suitable for this purpose and for many home and small business networks. I find it also quite acceptable for use as patch cables. You might consider a stranded wire patch cable if you have a notebook computer you are constantly moving around.
CAT 5 cable has four twisted pairs of wire for a total of eight individually insulated wires. Each pair is color coded with one wire having a solid color (blue, orange, green, or brown) twisted around a second wire with a white background and a stripe of the same color. The solid colors may have a white stripe in some cables. Cable colors are commonly described using the background color followed by the color of the stripe; e.g., white-orange is a cable with a white background and an orange stripe.

NETWORK CABLE
TOOLS



A LITTLE THEORY
Now, bear with me, you need to understand some of this
stuff...The 10BASE-T and 100BASE-TX Ethernets consist of two transmission lines. Each transmission line is a pair of twisted wires. One pair receives data signals and the other pair transmits data signals. A balanced line driver or transmitter is at one end of one of these lines and a line receiver is at the other end. A (much) simplified schematic for one of these lines and its transmitter and receiver follow:

Pulses of energy travel down the transmission
line at about the speed of light (186,000 miles/second). The principal
components of one of these pulses of energy is the voltage potential between
wires and current flowing near the surface of the wires. This energy can
also be considered as residing in the magnetic field which surrounds the wires
and the electric field between the wires. In other words, an
electromagnetic wave which is guided by, and travels down the wires.
The main concern is the transient magnetic fields which
surrounds the wires and the magnetic fields generated externally by the other
transmission lines in the cable, other network cables, electric motors,
fluorescent lights, telephone and electric lines, lightning, etc. This is known
as noise. Magnetic fields induce their own pulses in a transmission
line which may literally bury the Ethernet pulses, the conveyor of the
information being sent down the line.The twisted-pair Ethernet employs two principle means for combating noise. The first is the use of balanced transmitters and receivers. A signal pulse actually consists of two simultaneous pulses relative to ground: a negative pulse on one line and a positive pulse on the other. The receiver detects the total difference between these two pulses. Since a pulse of noise (shown in red in the diagram) usually produces pulses of the same polarity on both lines one pulse is essentially canceled by out the other at the receiver. Also, the magnetic field surrounding one wire from a signal pulse is a mirror of the one on the other wire. At a very short distance from the two wires the magnetic fields are opposite and have a tendency to cancel the effect of each other out. This reduces the line's impact on the other pair of wires and the rest of the world.
The second and the primary means of reducing crosstalk--the term crosstalk came from the ability to (over) hear conversations on other lines on your phone--between the pairs in the cable, is the double helix configuration produced by twisting the wires together. This configuration produces symmetrical (identical) noise signals in each wire. Ideally, their difference, as detected at the receiver, is zero. In actuality it is much reduced.
COLOR-CODE
STANDARDS
Again, please bear with me... Let's start with simple
pin-out diagrams of the two types of UTP Ethernet cables and watch how
committees can make a can of worms out of them. Here are the
diagrams:
Note that the TX (transmitter) pins are connected
to corresponding RX (receiver) pins, plus to plus and minus to minus. And
that you must use a cossover cable to connect units with identical
interfaces. If you use a straight-through cable, one of the two units
must, in effect, perform the cross-over function.
Two wire color-code standards apply: EIA/TIA 568A and
EIA/TIA 568B. The codes are commonly depicted with RJ-45 jacks
as follows:If we apply the 586A color code and show all eight wires, our pin-out looks like this:![]()

However, the actual cables are not physically that simple. In the diagrams, the orange pair of wires are not adjacent. The blue pair is upside-down. The right ends match RJ-45 jacks and the left ends do not. If, for example, we invert the left side of the 586A "straight"-thru cable to match a 586A jack--put one 180° twist in the entire cable from end-to-end--and twist together and rearrange the appropriate pairs, we get the following can-of-worms:

Keeping the above principles in mind, we can
simplify the diagram for a 568A straight-thru cable by untwisting the
wires, except the 180° twist in the entire cable, and bending the ends
upward. Likewise, if we exchange the green and orange pairs in the 568A
diagram we will get a simplified diagram for a 568B straight-thru cable.
If we cross the green and orange pairs in the 568A diagram we will arrive at a
simplified diagram for a crossover cable. All three are shown
below.

LET'S MAKE IT
SIMPLER
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There are only two unique cable ends in the
preceding diagrams. They correspond to the 568A and 568B RJ-45 jacks and are
shown to the right.
Again, the wires with colored backgrounds
may have white stripes and may be donated that way in diagrams found
elsewhere. For example, the green wire may be labeled Green-White--I don't
bother. The background color is always specified first.
Now, all you need to remember, to properly
configure the cables, are the diagrams for the two cable ends and the following
rules:
-
A straight-thru cable has identical ends.
-
A crossover cable has different ends.
It makes no functional difference which standard
you use for a straight-thru cable. You can start a crossover cable
with either standard as long as the other end is the other standard.
It makes no functional difference which end is which. Despite what you may
have read elsewhere, a 568A patch cable will work in a network with 568B wiring
and 568B patch cable will work in a 568A network. The electrons couldn't
care less.
My preference is to use the 568A standard
for straight-thru cables and to start crossover cables with a 568A end.
That way all I have to remember is the diagram for the 568A end, that a
straight-thru cable has two of them, and that the green and orange pairs are
swapped at the other end of a crossover cable.
LET'S MAKE SOME
CABLES
1. Pull the cable off the reel to the
desired length and cut. I have a box of cable at one end of my shop and a
mark on the floor 10' away. For cable lengths which are a fraction
of ten feet, I eye-ball the length as I pull the cable out of
the box (also, my feet are about one foot long). For longer cables, I pull
it out to the ten foot mark and go back to the box and pull the remaining
fraction or another ten feet. If you are pulling cables through walls, a
hole in the floor, etc., it easier to attach the RJ-45 plugs after the cable is
pulled. The total length of wire segments between a PC and a hub or
between two PC's cannot exceed 100 Meters (328 feet or about the length of a
football field) for 100BASE-TX and 300 Meters for 10BASE-T.

3. Inspect the wires for nicks.
Cut off the end and start over if you see any. You may have to adjust the
blade with the screw at the front stripper. Cable diameters and jacket
thicknesses vary.

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5. Untwist the pairs and arrange the wires
in the order of the desired cable end. Flatten the end between your thumb
and forefinger. Trim the ends of the wires so they are even with one
another. It is very important that the unstripped (untwisted) end
be slightly less than 1/2" long. If it is
longer than 1/2" it will be out-of-spec and susceptible to crosstalk.
If it less than slightly less than 1/2" it will not be properly clinched
when RJ-45 plug is crimped on.. Flatten again. There should be
little or no space between the wires.

ALL ABOUT
CRIMPING
7. Hold the wire near the RJ-45 plug with
the clip down and firmly push it into the left side of the front of the crimper
(it will only go in one way). Hold the wire in place squeeze the crimper
handles quite firmly. This is what will happen:
(Crimp it once.) The crimper pushes two plungers down on the RJ-45 plug. One forces what amounts to a cleverly designed plastic plug/wedge onto the cable jacket and very firmly clinches it. The other seats the "pins," each with two teeth at its end, through the insulation and into the conductors of their respective wires.![]()
8. Test the crimp... If done properly an average person will not be able to pull the plug off the cable with his or her bare hands. And that quite simply, besides lower cost, is the primary advantage of twisted-pair cables over the older thinwire, coaxial cables. In fact, I would say the RJ-45 and ease of its installation is the main reason coaxial cable is no longer widely used for small Ethernets. But, don't pull that hard on the plug. It could stretch the cable and change its characteristics. Look at the side of the plug and see if it looks like the diagram and give it a fairly firm tug to make sure it is crimped well.
9. Prepare the other end of the cable so it has the desired end and crimp.
10. If both ends of the cable are within reach, hold them next to each other and with RJ-45 clips facing away. Look through the bottom of the plugs. If the plugs are wired correctly, and they are identical, it is a straight-thru cable. If they are wired correctly and they are different, it is a crossover cable.
11. If you have an operational network, test the cable. Copy some large files.
12. If the cable doesn't work, inspect the ends again and make sure you have the right cable and that it is plugged into the correct units for the type of cable. Try power-cycling (cold booting) the involved computers.
13. If you have many straight-thru cables and a crossover cable in your system, you should consider labeling the crossover cable or using a different colored cable for the crossover cable so you don't mix them up. I do not recommend implementing the crossover function, as recommended elsewhere, with two RJ-45 jacks, appropriately wired back to back, and two straight-thru cables. This method costs noticeably more, introduces more than the necessary number of components and connections, increases the complexity and time of assembly, and decreases reliability.
(Abhishek Srivastava)
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