theEclipse
Programmer
Hi cabling experts...can you help me understand this one?
My site has two buildings. We just moved in and I am charged with putting both buildings on the same network. There is a buried telephone trunk line between the two buildings (2x25 pair) which terminates into 66-blocks. Total cable length is probably 200'.
In an attempt to use part of the cable as a cat-5 cable I punched a patch cable into the blocks on both ends, on empty pairs. When I put my el-cheapo cat5 continuity tester on the run it lights up all wires in the correct order. When I put a fancier tester on the run it tells me that I have a split pair and signals 3-6 & 4-5 as places to look. 6 years of making cat-5 and I have never herd of a split pair until I used this fancy-schmancy tester (which probably means that there is a bunch of this out there...).
Some googling leads me to this: "A split pair is defined as a transmit or receive signal that is carried on a single wire, with no opposing wire to help filter out unwanted noise and crosstalk from a neighboring pair. It commonly occurs when a punch-down block is wired incorrectly or when RJ-45 connectors are crimped onto the wrong wires."
Which is great, except that I cannot fathom how this is happening. If my continuity tester gives me a straight-through reading on all wires, how can I have a split pair?
I checked and re-checked my terminated ends of my patch cables and the patch cable side of the 66 block -- all in order. I re-punched the patch cable and even checked for the correctness of the wires where the cable comes into the 66 -- all good.
My testers are (cheapo continuity tester) and . The documentation which comes with the tester has a diagram of a split pair but I can't figure out how that would work given the readings of my continuity tester.
How can I better diagnose this problem?
Is my continuity tester worthless against this foe?
Thanks
Robert Carpenter
Remember....eternity is much longer than this ~80 years we will spend roaming this earth.
ô¿ô
My site has two buildings. We just moved in and I am charged with putting both buildings on the same network. There is a buried telephone trunk line between the two buildings (2x25 pair) which terminates into 66-blocks. Total cable length is probably 200'.
In an attempt to use part of the cable as a cat-5 cable I punched a patch cable into the blocks on both ends, on empty pairs. When I put my el-cheapo cat5 continuity tester on the run it lights up all wires in the correct order. When I put a fancier tester on the run it tells me that I have a split pair and signals 3-6 & 4-5 as places to look. 6 years of making cat-5 and I have never herd of a split pair until I used this fancy-schmancy tester (which probably means that there is a bunch of this out there...).
Some googling leads me to this: "A split pair is defined as a transmit or receive signal that is carried on a single wire, with no opposing wire to help filter out unwanted noise and crosstalk from a neighboring pair. It commonly occurs when a punch-down block is wired incorrectly or when RJ-45 connectors are crimped onto the wrong wires."
Which is great, except that I cannot fathom how this is happening. If my continuity tester gives me a straight-through reading on all wires, how can I have a split pair?
I checked and re-checked my terminated ends of my patch cables and the patch cable side of the 66 block -- all in order. I re-punched the patch cable and even checked for the correctness of the wires where the cable comes into the 66 -- all good.
My testers are (cheapo continuity tester) and . The documentation which comes with the tester has a diagram of a split pair but I can't figure out how that would work given the readings of my continuity tester.
How can I better diagnose this problem?
Is my continuity tester worthless against this foe?
Thanks
Robert Carpenter
Remember....eternity is much longer than this ~80 years we will spend roaming this earth.
ô¿ô