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Forum Discussion
Bytecode
Apr 07, 2020Tutor
shielded patch cable supplied with CM600 modem
After inspecting a particular patch cable I have connected to my PC, that cable was due for replacement. I decided to check all the other cables on my home network while I was at it. I noticed the C...
- Apr 09, 2020
I don't know the actual mfr is of the cables I bought. Back then and up to a while ago, I had ordered my cables from deepsurplus.com. Since I had worked at a tech company which we were building out a test lab, they had me get cables from there. I kept using them over the years. Also some may have come from monoprice.com as well.
Looking at one of my cables now, it's a TIA/EIA-568-B cert. This was one from deepsurplus.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TIA/EIA-568
https://community.fs.com/blog/should-we-use-cat6-or-cat6a-for-10gbase-t.html
Your url link is malformed. Doesn't work.
FURRYe38
Apr 08, 2020Guru - Experienced User
Of course not. Cables are cheap and since probably mostly "frabrique en chine", quality and cost is low.
However there maybe some interferences between the modem and wifi router that can be shielded by using a sheilded cable. Nothing wrong in using one either. If it works it can be used.
I've been using CAT6 for 10+years now. ZERO issues. I've long since got ride of 5e and 5 cabling on my network. I put in CAT6A heavy in wall cabling in a new home addition in future proofing for 10Gb when and if that ever comes to the consumer market on a rational cost. CAT6A is mostly larger size cabling for in wall configurations. CAT6 can do tp up 10Gb speeds however at only 55 meters and can be shielded or not sheilded. CAT6A and above are 10Gb rated and are all sheilded. They’re also capable of maintaining higher transmission speeds over longer cable lengths. Cat 6a cables are always shielded, and their sheathing, which is thick enough to completely eliminate crosstalk, makes for a much denser, less flexible cable than Cat 6.
Bytecode
Apr 09, 2020Tutor
Since you've been using CAT6 for 10+ years, would you mind if I asked what manufacturer(s) you might remember who make CAT6 patch cables that have a transmission speed of 5000 Mbit/s ?
Two variants of CAT6:
- 1000 Mbit/s CAT6, and
- 5000 Mbit/s CAT6
I'm looking for at least one manufacturer who provide the latter.
Per Wikipedia article Ethernet over twisted pair, the 1000 Mbit/s CAT6 is listed as market failure. The TIA/EIA 854 (2001) Standard is listed obsolete.
One business I was just talking to in their technical support (chat) said the CAT6 they sell meets Standard TIA/EIA 854 (2001) at the 1000 Mbit/s speed. So these still do exist in the market
- FURRYe38Apr 09, 2020Guru - Experienced User
I don't know the actual mfr is of the cables I bought. Back then and up to a while ago, I had ordered my cables from deepsurplus.com. Since I had worked at a tech company which we were building out a test lab, they had me get cables from there. I kept using them over the years. Also some may have come from monoprice.com as well.
Looking at one of my cables now, it's a TIA/EIA-568-B cert. This was one from deepsurplus.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TIA/EIA-568
https://community.fs.com/blog/should-we-use-cat6-or-cat6a-for-10gbase-t.html
Your url link is malformed. Doesn't work.
- BytecodeApr 10, 2020Tutor
Thanks. Perfect.
FS is just what I was looking for. It's not easy to find a business that has quality cables.
googling "TIA patch cord CAT6" or something similar doesn't return companies like this
FS gives you data sheets on each patch cable and also the Fluke test report which is an added bonus to know what you're buying.
The "Fabrique de Chine" cables are the ones I'm trying to avoid where you can't tell what you're buying on a lot of sites.
Sorry about the Wikipedia article I referenced (the link that was broken). It didn't matter anyway. That had to do with Ethernet TP-PHY - twisted pair based Ethernet Physical transport layers of the OSI model
- FURRYe38Apr 10, 2020Guru - Experienced User
Good Luck.