As I've learned from experience! Thanks for the help,guys. Now for the million dollar question; why does it introduce errors?
:-)~MIKE~(-:


On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 12:37 PM, Gilbert T. Gutierrez, Jr. <mailing-lists@phoenixinternet.net> wrote:
Mike,
It does matter the order. What you were taught would introduce all forms of errors.

in the connector from left to right with the copper contacts and the cable crimp facing you...

B Standard (Most commonly used)
Pin 1: orange white
Pin 2: orange
Pin 3: green white
Pin 4: blue
Pin 5: blue white
Pin 6: green
Pin 7: brown white
Pin 8: brown

A Standard
Pin 1: green white
Pin 2: green
Pin 3: orange white
Pin 4: blue
Pin 5: blue white
Pin 6: orange
Pin 7: brown white
Pin 8: brown

To make a standard cable, both cables sides should be the same. To make a crossover cable, you crimp one side A and the other side B. You will also find differences in cable that will cause issues with some cable ends. Never strip the insulation off of the conductors and make sure that you have cable insulation inside the retaining crimp of the connector to relieve strain on the cable.

Gilbert


On 2/10/2013 10:25 PM, Michael Havens wrote:
so then (my cables are stripe, solid) the proper way to do it is:

  stripe orange,orange
  stripe green,blue
  stripe blue,green
  stripe brown,brown

I was taught,

  blue, stripe blue
  green, stripe orange
  orange, stripe green
  brown, stripe brown
:-)~MIKE~(-:


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