TFO Winder to [email protected] • 2 months agoWiring Ethernet Cable rulelemmy.mlimagemessage-square34fedilinkarrow-up1214
arrow-up1214imageWiring Ethernet Cable rulelemmy.mlTFO Winder to [email protected] • 2 months agomessage-square34fedilink
minus-squareDraconic NEOlinkfedilink29•2 months agoI’m pretty sure you have to cross the blue and brown wires too.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink13•2 months agoAre you crazy??? That’s only if you are fighting Zuul!!
minus-squareDraconic NEOlinkfedilink2•2 months agoYou never know if you will be though. Better to have it and not need it than need it and not have it.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink22•2 months agoOrange white Orange Green white Blue Blue white Green Brown white Brown Is etched in my memory. Swap oranges and greens to go between style A and B, do it on one end for a crossover.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink6•2 months ago^ This. There are A and B standards, and each standard has its own crossover. But there is also a crossover between A and B standards, which is typically what is used when referring to crossover cables. In other words: Not A-to-A xover Not B-to-B xover xover A-to-B
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink2•2 months agoI was about to say - the outs go in, and the ins go out. The picture is wrong.
minus-squareDraconic NEOlinkfedilink2•2 months agoIt is? This is the diagram I have laminated and glued on my termination kit never had any issues with it.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink2•2 months agoNo, I mean the OP. Theirs is a half-crossover.
I’m pretty sure you have to cross the blue and brown wires too.
Are you crazy??? That’s only if you are fighting Zuul!!
There is no DIN, only Zuul!
You never know if you will be though. Better to have it and not need it than need it and not have it.
Orange white Orange Green white Blue Blue white Green Brown white Brown
Is etched in my memory. Swap oranges and greens to go between style A and B, do it on one end for a crossover.
^ This. There are A and B standards, and each standard has its own crossover. But there is also a crossover between A and B standards, which is typically what is used when referring to crossover cables.
In other words:
Not A-to-A xover
Not B-to-B xover
xover A-to-B
I was about to say - the outs go in, and the ins go out. The picture is wrong.
It is? This is the diagram I have laminated and glued on my termination kit never had any issues with it.
No, I mean the OP. Theirs is a half-crossover.
Oh yeah, that makes more sense.