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The web site that you referenced looks good. You line up the wires while holding them securly and slide the jack over them and then crimp. If you mess it up you chop the end off, get another jack, and try again. After awhile you get the hang of it. If you have a commercially available patch cord available you can look at it to see how the colors line up. You may find that they use other colors such as green, blue, yellow, and red. Personally, I prefer wall plates with the snap-in jacks. They show on the jack itself which wire goes where. I believe that I used Leviton when I finished my basement about a decade ago. If you go that route you will need a punch-down tool with a 110 (if I recall correctly) blade. I like the clean look better than a hole in the wall. I've also added jacks to upstairs rooms with the wall plates. This requires access to the basement or attic, and lots of measuring to make sure that the hole you drill comes out inside the wall instead of the floor/ceiling. You will also need a drywall knife and the plastic pop-in wall boxes that David mentioned. It kind of makes wireless look a lot better, doesn't it? <g> Dave Parnin -- Nishikawa Standard Company Topeka, IN 46571 daparnin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx Dan <dan27649@xxxxxxx To: PC Technical Discussion for iSeries Users om> <pctech@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: cc: pctech-bounces@mi Subject: [PCTECH] Cat 5 cable RJ-45 connection HELP! drange.com 11/01/2005 10:03 AM Please respond to PC Technical Discussion for iSeries Users (Is PC-tech the best/only list to post this? Would midrange-l be an appropriate spot as well?) I am running a Cat5 cable in my house to a room for which I had to drill a hole just big enough for the cable but not for the end connector. So, in my infinite wisdom, I bought 40 feet of Cat5 and a box of 10 connectors, and borrowed the RJ-45 crimper we have here in the office from way back when we used to make our own. So, I use the crimper to snip about a half inch from the cable jacket, and wonder to myself "How in the h... heck am I supposed line these color-coded wires up so that they miraculously land in their proper slots?" I found a reference to color coding at http://www.aptcommunications.com/ncode.htm, so I now understand the importance of getting these wires lined up correctly. But getting them there... Where's the magnifying glass and the micro-surgeon's touch? Is there an easier / more reliable way to do this? TIA, Dan -- This is the PC Technical Discussion for iSeries Users (PcTech) mailing list To post a message email: PcTech@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/pctech or email: PcTech-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/pctech.
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