A word of caution about thinking the test is a guarantee that it will work....
Its all well and good to say I have done this or that and it still passed a tester. The test only shows it is capable of passing an electrical signal, actually performing is another story depending on circumstances.
A tester doesn't actually pass packets along the cable, the crosstalk issues that come into play during actual transmission can show something completely different.
Crosstalk can add to the packets in ways that only show up when the system, is being stressed with large amounts of data. The data packets are more susceptible to crosstalk than the signal a tester sends down the line.
I am not saying this to be the case 100% of the time, but I have seen many runs pass a Cat 5 test, which is all the Fluke 2000 does. It tests using the old TSB-67 tests, not TSB-95 or Cat 5e, which are much more stringent.
Just to clarify, I am NOT saying you shouldn't test and certify cable runs. You should be testing EVERY cable installed for a paying customer, we as professionals owe them that degree of professionalism.
Having test results also protects us, especially when it comes to Cat 5e and Cat 6. If you run tests, you would know EXACTLY where a problem is...at least run TDR on ALL installed cables.
By running at a MINIMUM a TDR on every cable, you can document length, then when you have problems like this, you run another TDR and compare, the difference is where your problem is... Much quicker than all this speculation and as an added bonus, you get to look like a professional installer/technician to your client.
Well, I have exceeded my $0.02 worth....