Quote:
Originally Posted by flowrebmit
You wrote the following in your first post:
I thought you meant that you had created a cross-over cable - I can't think what else you mean by that sentence.
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I am so sorry that was not clear at all.
What I meant was that I unrolled the white/coloured pairs and crossed them only at the very end of the connector to avoid and cross interference between them. If you think back at the wiring of a connector you need to separate the green/green-white and "cross" them with the blue/blue-white. I read somewhere that if you unroll them too much in advance there may be cross interference between the channels.
The reason I wrote that is that I was and still am thinking of poor quality signal and thought that I'd unrolled them too much in advance. I did it again making sure only the last bit is unrolled: no difference.
The link posted above states:
Quote:
Re-use of old cables
We have seen this happen time and time again. Perfectly good patch cables that have been working fine for years, get removed from their installation, and re-installed on the same, or different network. The result can be a nightmare. What happens is that the cable, over time, adapts to the way that it is bent in it's original installation. When these cables are removed and re-installed, they can either completely loose their connection, or develop intermittent problems. This is due to stresses that may be opposite to what they were originally subject to. If the integrity of your network is more valuable than the price of new patch cables, then we strongly suggest that you use brand new cables for all closet cleanups, network moves, etc.
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Could it be this is at the root of this problem? I still find it odd the laptop works fine with it.