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How should I connect my cat5 cable to connectors having an orange-green line?



The Next CEO of Stack OverflowCan I use a junction box to splice together wires that are on a different circuit?Help connecting cat5e cables for home networkingHow can I run cables along a concrete wall?Which cable/conduit should I use to run a new 240 volt line for an oven?Run cat5e/coax parallel to power conduitWhat kind of wiring/service are these wires for and how do I test them to find out?How to set up home network w/ fiber from street & unterminated Cat5e in garageConnect to pre-wired Cat5e (no clear demarc point)Re-wire Cat5e RJ11 jacks to RJ45 ethernetWiring ethernet cable from AT&T fiber Modem to a specific room










2















I have some cat5 cables in my attic in need to splice . they have been up there for 10 to 15years so no sure if cat5e or cat5.



I'm looking at a tool-less connector on amazon, but the color coding has a orange-green line I do not see in my cable



enter image description here



enter image description here










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    Note the faint text on the outer jacket of the cable. Examine that carefully and it will tell you (generally repeating every 2 or 3 feet) exactly what type of cable it is.)

    – Ecnerwal
    5 hours ago















2















I have some cat5 cables in my attic in need to splice . they have been up there for 10 to 15years so no sure if cat5e or cat5.



I'm looking at a tool-less connector on amazon, but the color coding has a orange-green line I do not see in my cable



enter image description here



enter image description here










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    Note the faint text on the outer jacket of the cable. Examine that carefully and it will tell you (generally repeating every 2 or 3 feet) exactly what type of cable it is.)

    – Ecnerwal
    5 hours ago













2












2








2








I have some cat5 cables in my attic in need to splice . they have been up there for 10 to 15years so no sure if cat5e or cat5.



I'm looking at a tool-less connector on amazon, but the color coding has a orange-green line I do not see in my cable



enter image description here



enter image description here










share|improve this question
















I have some cat5 cables in my attic in need to splice . they have been up there for 10 to 15years so no sure if cat5e or cat5.



I'm looking at a tool-less connector on amazon, but the color coding has a orange-green line I do not see in my cable



enter image description here



enter image description here







wiring ethernet






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 5 hours ago









manassehkatz

10.1k1337




10.1k1337










asked 6 hours ago









Hell.BentHell.Bent

1214




1214







  • 1





    Note the faint text on the outer jacket of the cable. Examine that carefully and it will tell you (generally repeating every 2 or 3 feet) exactly what type of cable it is.)

    – Ecnerwal
    5 hours ago












  • 1





    Note the faint text on the outer jacket of the cable. Examine that carefully and it will tell you (generally repeating every 2 or 3 feet) exactly what type of cable it is.)

    – Ecnerwal
    5 hours ago







1




1





Note the faint text on the outer jacket of the cable. Examine that carefully and it will tell you (generally repeating every 2 or 3 feet) exactly what type of cable it is.)

– Ecnerwal
5 hours ago





Note the faint text on the outer jacket of the cable. Examine that carefully and it will tell you (generally repeating every 2 or 3 feet) exactly what type of cable it is.)

– Ecnerwal
5 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















7














That's not "orange/green", it is T568A vs. T568B



Cat 3/5/6 cabling can be connected in two "flavors" - T568A and T568B. The cable (without ends attached) is the same and they are functionally identical. The only question is the sequence - Blue/Orange/Green/Brown vs. Blue/Green/Orange/Brown. Most connectors & jacks include color-coding for both types, marked "A" and "B", so that you can mix & match parts from different brands and have everything work together. You can actually see that in the image if you look closely - A and B are printed on top of the color coding on both left (solid blue, pin 4) and right (brown/white, pin 7). If your device says "Cable should be T586A CAT 5" and you wire it up T586B CAT 5e, it will work just fine, because the electrons don't care about the insulation color.



I usually use T568B, but it really doesn't matter as long as you are consistent - i.e., both ends of each cable should (normally) be the same.



What does matter is the quality of the connection.



Each new cable type 3 -> 5 -> 5e -> 6 puts in new, more exacting requirements on the number of twists and other factors. So make sure any connectors, adapters, splices, etc. meet the requirements of the cable type you want to use. If you have Cat 6 everywhere except one segment is Cat 5e then you'll be fine with Cat 5e speeds but Cat 6 might not work, and you may have trouble figuring out why things aren't working right. So I would at a minimum use the same quality/specification for everything that is hidden - wall jacks, cable inside walls, splices in the attic, etc.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    use T568B, +1, because it "matches the older ATA&T 258A color code and is/was(?) the most widely used wiring scheme."

    – Mazura
    33 mins ago












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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









7














That's not "orange/green", it is T568A vs. T568B



Cat 3/5/6 cabling can be connected in two "flavors" - T568A and T568B. The cable (without ends attached) is the same and they are functionally identical. The only question is the sequence - Blue/Orange/Green/Brown vs. Blue/Green/Orange/Brown. Most connectors & jacks include color-coding for both types, marked "A" and "B", so that you can mix & match parts from different brands and have everything work together. You can actually see that in the image if you look closely - A and B are printed on top of the color coding on both left (solid blue, pin 4) and right (brown/white, pin 7). If your device says "Cable should be T586A CAT 5" and you wire it up T586B CAT 5e, it will work just fine, because the electrons don't care about the insulation color.



I usually use T568B, but it really doesn't matter as long as you are consistent - i.e., both ends of each cable should (normally) be the same.



What does matter is the quality of the connection.



Each new cable type 3 -> 5 -> 5e -> 6 puts in new, more exacting requirements on the number of twists and other factors. So make sure any connectors, adapters, splices, etc. meet the requirements of the cable type you want to use. If you have Cat 6 everywhere except one segment is Cat 5e then you'll be fine with Cat 5e speeds but Cat 6 might not work, and you may have trouble figuring out why things aren't working right. So I would at a minimum use the same quality/specification for everything that is hidden - wall jacks, cable inside walls, splices in the attic, etc.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    use T568B, +1, because it "matches the older ATA&T 258A color code and is/was(?) the most widely used wiring scheme."

    – Mazura
    33 mins ago
















7














That's not "orange/green", it is T568A vs. T568B



Cat 3/5/6 cabling can be connected in two "flavors" - T568A and T568B. The cable (without ends attached) is the same and they are functionally identical. The only question is the sequence - Blue/Orange/Green/Brown vs. Blue/Green/Orange/Brown. Most connectors & jacks include color-coding for both types, marked "A" and "B", so that you can mix & match parts from different brands and have everything work together. You can actually see that in the image if you look closely - A and B are printed on top of the color coding on both left (solid blue, pin 4) and right (brown/white, pin 7). If your device says "Cable should be T586A CAT 5" and you wire it up T586B CAT 5e, it will work just fine, because the electrons don't care about the insulation color.



I usually use T568B, but it really doesn't matter as long as you are consistent - i.e., both ends of each cable should (normally) be the same.



What does matter is the quality of the connection.



Each new cable type 3 -> 5 -> 5e -> 6 puts in new, more exacting requirements on the number of twists and other factors. So make sure any connectors, adapters, splices, etc. meet the requirements of the cable type you want to use. If you have Cat 6 everywhere except one segment is Cat 5e then you'll be fine with Cat 5e speeds but Cat 6 might not work, and you may have trouble figuring out why things aren't working right. So I would at a minimum use the same quality/specification for everything that is hidden - wall jacks, cable inside walls, splices in the attic, etc.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    use T568B, +1, because it "matches the older ATA&T 258A color code and is/was(?) the most widely used wiring scheme."

    – Mazura
    33 mins ago














7












7








7







That's not "orange/green", it is T568A vs. T568B



Cat 3/5/6 cabling can be connected in two "flavors" - T568A and T568B. The cable (without ends attached) is the same and they are functionally identical. The only question is the sequence - Blue/Orange/Green/Brown vs. Blue/Green/Orange/Brown. Most connectors & jacks include color-coding for both types, marked "A" and "B", so that you can mix & match parts from different brands and have everything work together. You can actually see that in the image if you look closely - A and B are printed on top of the color coding on both left (solid blue, pin 4) and right (brown/white, pin 7). If your device says "Cable should be T586A CAT 5" and you wire it up T586B CAT 5e, it will work just fine, because the electrons don't care about the insulation color.



I usually use T568B, but it really doesn't matter as long as you are consistent - i.e., both ends of each cable should (normally) be the same.



What does matter is the quality of the connection.



Each new cable type 3 -> 5 -> 5e -> 6 puts in new, more exacting requirements on the number of twists and other factors. So make sure any connectors, adapters, splices, etc. meet the requirements of the cable type you want to use. If you have Cat 6 everywhere except one segment is Cat 5e then you'll be fine with Cat 5e speeds but Cat 6 might not work, and you may have trouble figuring out why things aren't working right. So I would at a minimum use the same quality/specification for everything that is hidden - wall jacks, cable inside walls, splices in the attic, etc.






share|improve this answer















That's not "orange/green", it is T568A vs. T568B



Cat 3/5/6 cabling can be connected in two "flavors" - T568A and T568B. The cable (without ends attached) is the same and they are functionally identical. The only question is the sequence - Blue/Orange/Green/Brown vs. Blue/Green/Orange/Brown. Most connectors & jacks include color-coding for both types, marked "A" and "B", so that you can mix & match parts from different brands and have everything work together. You can actually see that in the image if you look closely - A and B are printed on top of the color coding on both left (solid blue, pin 4) and right (brown/white, pin 7). If your device says "Cable should be T586A CAT 5" and you wire it up T586B CAT 5e, it will work just fine, because the electrons don't care about the insulation color.



I usually use T568B, but it really doesn't matter as long as you are consistent - i.e., both ends of each cable should (normally) be the same.



What does matter is the quality of the connection.



Each new cable type 3 -> 5 -> 5e -> 6 puts in new, more exacting requirements on the number of twists and other factors. So make sure any connectors, adapters, splices, etc. meet the requirements of the cable type you want to use. If you have Cat 6 everywhere except one segment is Cat 5e then you'll be fine with Cat 5e speeds but Cat 6 might not work, and you may have trouble figuring out why things aren't working right. So I would at a minimum use the same quality/specification for everything that is hidden - wall jacks, cable inside walls, splices in the attic, etc.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 3 hours ago

























answered 6 hours ago









manassehkatzmanassehkatz

10.1k1337




10.1k1337







  • 1





    use T568B, +1, because it "matches the older ATA&T 258A color code and is/was(?) the most widely used wiring scheme."

    – Mazura
    33 mins ago













  • 1





    use T568B, +1, because it "matches the older ATA&T 258A color code and is/was(?) the most widely used wiring scheme."

    – Mazura
    33 mins ago








1




1





use T568B, +1, because it "matches the older ATA&T 258A color code and is/was(?) the most widely used wiring scheme."

– Mazura
33 mins ago






use T568B, +1, because it "matches the older ATA&T 258A color code and is/was(?) the most widely used wiring scheme."

– Mazura
33 mins ago


















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