- Sep 25, 2017
- 2,875
- 3,759
Just a warning for anyone who uses the pre-made patch cable supplied by their ISP.
Today I broke the cable tester out to test a small patch cable I made up to go router to modem as the pre-made ones were too long - I only wanted anout 12 inches as they sit side by side. Whilst there I decided to test my entire network, all of which tested fine. However, when selecting a patch cable to shorten, I decided to use and test the ISP supplied cables (which I always save unused in a bag for a rainy day) - supplied from multiple ISP's over the years.
For RJ45 Patch cables, I found a failure rate of around a staggering 50% taken over about 10 cables tested.
It can't get any worse can it?
Hell Yes. I tested RJ11 patch cables next. I found a failure rate of around 75% of the cable tested over about 8 cables tested.
In 10 mins my bin went from empty to looking like the rejects bin at a cable manufacturer.
The moral of the story here seems to be always test your patch cables. Don't assume those shiny new sealed in the packet cables from your ISP are fault free cables, they might not be and on my results that chance could be quite high.
Incidentally, all the bought accesssory patch cables in my system I tested passed perfectly suggesting the issue lies with bulk produced ISP cables rather than accessory ones, although after today, I'd always test all cables bought or otherwise.
Today I broke the cable tester out to test a small patch cable I made up to go router to modem as the pre-made ones were too long - I only wanted anout 12 inches as they sit side by side. Whilst there I decided to test my entire network, all of which tested fine. However, when selecting a patch cable to shorten, I decided to use and test the ISP supplied cables (which I always save unused in a bag for a rainy day) - supplied from multiple ISP's over the years.
For RJ45 Patch cables, I found a failure rate of around a staggering 50% taken over about 10 cables tested.
It can't get any worse can it?
Hell Yes. I tested RJ11 patch cables next. I found a failure rate of around 75% of the cable tested over about 8 cables tested.
In 10 mins my bin went from empty to looking like the rejects bin at a cable manufacturer.
The moral of the story here seems to be always test your patch cables. Don't assume those shiny new sealed in the packet cables from your ISP are fault free cables, they might not be and on my results that chance could be quite high.
Incidentally, all the bought accesssory patch cables in my system I tested passed perfectly suggesting the issue lies with bulk produced ISP cables rather than accessory ones, although after today, I'd always test all cables bought or otherwise.