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Handmade vs. Commercially Produced Ethernet Cables

An anonymous reader writes "We have a T1 line coming into our satellite office and we rely fairly heavily on it to transfer large amounts of data over a VPN to the head office across the country. Recently, we decided to upgrade to a 20 Mbit line. Being the lone IT guy here, it fell on me to run cable from the ISP's box to our server room so I went out and bought a spool of Cat6. I mentioned the purchase and the plan to run the cable myself to my boss in head office and in an emailed response he stated that it's next to impossible to create quality cable (ie: cable that will pass a Time Domain Reflectometer test) by hand without expensive dies, special Ethernet jacks and special cable. He even went so far as to say that handmade cable couldn't compare to even the cheapest Belkin cables. I've never once ran into a problem with handmade patch cables. Do you create your own cable or do you bite the bullet and buy it from some place?"

63 of 837 comments (clear)

  1. How much is your time worth by linzeal · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While it may be cost effective to crimp and cut your own cable when you are making less than 20 dollars an hour once you are making 20 dollar+ just buy it.

    1. Re:How much is your time worth by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 4, Informative

      While it may be cost effective to crimp and cut your own cable when you are making less than 20 dollars an hour once you are making 20 dollar+ just buy it.

      I promise you I can make more than $20 worth of test-worthy cables in one hour.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    2. Re:How much is your time worth by jcr · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I promise you I can make more than $20 worth of test-worthy cables in one hour.

      I'll second that. I make my own cables when I want a specific length, rather than having the extra wire coiled up in a cable tie.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    3. Re:How much is your time worth by Philip+K+Dickhead · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yeah,

      But the occasional dud-job does pass by. Then you've got this thing spraying ether all over the walls, the floors, and what-have-you.

      Try explaining that one, passing the hallway, with ether dripping from the front of one''s trousers. "It's my handworked cable, you see..." you might mumble to colleagues, to their dubious glances.

      I know a lot of you came up while 10 MbPS was standard. The drizzling or atomizing was even comforting - almost acceptable in Cat5. Now, 100 MbPS goes off like a water-cannon. With Gig arriving to the desktop and commodity rack, I don't know if "grow-your-own" is advice that one may any longer advocate with a dry lap or chin!

      --
      "Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
    4. Re:How much is your time worth by Z00L00K · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It depends on the situation and the reason for the cable.

      Sometimes there are restrictions for routing the cable that makes a prefabricated cable unusable.

      And you may sometimes run into problems with a handmade cable, but often it does work just fine. If you get problems - just remake one contact at a time. If you have a decently modern intelligent switch you can also monitor the port for data errors, and if you don't have any errors it's good enough.

      As for cabling quality - all the outlets in buildings are usually contacted by the cable jocks from the installation company and they do a simple test and then moves on to the next. I doubt that the quality from a hand made cable and those outlets are much different.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    5. Re:How much is your time worth by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 5, Funny

      audio grade Ethernet cables

      Yeah, I have those. I keep it next to my hydrogen grade garden hose, and my lava grade plumbing.

    6. Re:How much is your time worth by zappepcs · · Score: 4, Insightful

      time out! How does making one cable run constitute reason for determining ROI on making cables based on cables per hour etc?

      There are some of us who can whip out a standard 15ft Cat5 cable in about twice the time it takes to unwrap a commercially purchased cable. If you need custom sized cables, it's far easier and cheaper except for very small number of situations. If you have one cable run to do and the parts available, it makes no sense to go buy one. It's not like you're going to run out and get a 39 meter Cat6 cable at lunch time in the Mall.

      Now, if you need 50 of them? perhaps a different story, but same story goes when you need 5000 of them. Savings get bigger with bulk. In this case, it was for a single cable. My suspicion is that his boss has never actually seen a well made cable created in front of his eyes. Remember grasshopper, all great Samurai swords were made by hand, not a machine with expensive dies.

      Whatever happened to quality custom workmanship? It's almost as if people expect that it can't be done anymore? WTF?

    7. Re:How much is your time worth by ACorvus · · Score: 5, Informative

      I can't agree with this - if the termination of a transmission line is correct at each end, then the length has no matter at all for any frequency (in theory, not accounting for increasing losses with frequency, but then there's a reason for length restrictions in the CatX/Ethernet standards).

      If you're talking about a *tuned* line (eg a stub or a tuned antenna feeder), then length is important. But we're not. If you've got problems with harmonics or matching and reflections then your ethernet cards are probably bottom-shelf knock-offs.

      The problem with premade-lenght cables is you're going to run into tangles if many changes are made, and are going to end up coiling. Make that coil too tight and you're going to cause crosstalk. A custom job with all cables neatly following defined routes with no coils, twists or kinks is going to make life easier in the long term.

      --
      -- Sig Sig Sputnik
    8. Re:How much is your time worth by thebes · · Score: 5, Funny

      Damn, my mod points expired.

      As another EE (who does all their work at about 3GHz), I must say you need to be modded to oblivion for that comment.

      Please, just stop.

    9. Re:How much is your time worth by Forge · · Score: 5, Interesting

      There are 3 types of Ethernet cable.

      1. Amateur cable. These are done just any old way as long as the colors match at both ends. The pairs don't even have to be twisted for it to work over very short distances (2 to 6 feet) at 1GB.

      2. Professional Cable. All the pinouts done properly according to whichever standard you are working with, by someone who knows what he is doing.

      3. Factory cables. Here is the dirty secret. Some of these are done by robots and some are just professional cables. There is no way for you to tell which is which.

      Now to your specific problem. If your boss insists on paying $300 for $20 worth of cable just to satisfy his own misguided notions of quality, you as the highered help just have to accept his decision and go cry into your beer.

      Or better yet. Smile. they had no intention of using the money you would have saved to enhance your salary.

      --
      --= Isn't it surprising how badly I spell ?
    10. Re:How much is your time worth by camperdave · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Set up a dummy company, and get them to sell you the $300 cables for $250. Then crimp the cables and sell them to yourself. You pocket $250 less materials, the boss gets his "professionally made" cables, and everybody is happy.

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    11. Re:How much is your time worth by postbigbang · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Uh, what part of unshielded twisted pair don't you understand? The whole idea of the twists assuages any reasonable amount of both reception and transmission externally. Modern endpoint tranceivers are really good at signal to noise problems; you can usually make cables quite a bit longer than the IEEE specs call for with total impunity. And Cat6 isn't necessary, either, just quality Cat5/5e is fine.

      The only place where fast transmission cables have problem with Ethernet is at the connectors. Crosstalk there, and ONLY THERE, can be a problem unless you do something pretty unnatural to the cable. RJ-45s simpily suck because of the parallel tines. Crimp according to directions. Takes about 30sec a side. If you're worried, shoot a TDR down the line. Fluke and others make some pretty cheapo testers, or bug a cable guy to test it for you. This is not rocket science. Don't wimp out and have someone else do it. Buy quality connectors and cable, and just do it. Get the color code, follow it, and move on.

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    12. Re:How much is your time worth by Glonoinha · · Score: 5, Informative

      Orange and white, Orange. Green and White, Blue. Blue and White, Green. Brown and White, Brown.

      Use pieces (cable, plugs, jacks) certified for the speed you want to carry.

      Once you get those two down, understand not to untwist more of the cable than absolutely necessary to get it into the connector, get it correctly into the cable, and get a good solid crimp on it - and TEST IT after you crimp both ends - odds are it's more than sufficient to carry as much GigE traffic as you care to move.

      Once you have a stock of pieces on the shelf, it's WAY more cost effective from an employers perspective to make a single cable than to sit down, fill out a purchase order, have that purchase order pass through several hands during processing, follow up with the paper order, wait a week to have that single cable shipped to you. ESPECIALLY if that cable is a statistical anomaly and needs to be replaced.

      If you're wiring a patch panel for the first time, however, order a hundred or so cables of various length and save yourself the hassle.

      --
      Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
    13. Re:How much is your time worth by thsths · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >Welcome to the real world, where standing waves on transmission lines do exist, and you can choose lengths carefully based on the frequency going down it.

      That may be true for RF, but the whole point of communication is that you get more than a single frequency - a frequency spectrum. So matching your cable length is no good for Ethernet.

      In practice, there are hardly issues with standing waves, because the cable is unidirectional. So two reflections have to occur, and there is additional damping in the cable. So unless your impedance is way off, you should be fine. Even a 10% mismatch is perfectly harmless.

    14. Re:How much is your time worth by jrumney · · Score: 4, Funny

      So, you would want to have cables that were some integer (or half-integer?) multiple of your wavelength to take care of harmonics, right?

      No, you want to avoid those integer (or half) multiples of your wavelength to avoid setting up standing waves due to reflections in the cable. So go and trim a couple of picometers off those cables you just built and you'll be good to go.

    15. Re:How much is your time worth by MarkGriz · · Score: 4, Funny

      "If you've taken physics especially emf harmonics, you'd know wanting a specific length without considering harmonics is all kinds of bad because it may result in emi emission,"

      Let me guess... you work for Monster Cable, in marketing perhaps?

      --
      Beauty is in the eye of the beerholder.
    16. Re:How much is your time worth by Gonoff · · Score: 5, Funny

      I don't see anything 'round' about your distances of 1.8288222384784 and 3.0480370641307 metres.

      --
      I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
    17. Re:How much is your time worth by ColdWetDog · · Score: 4, Funny

      Here's a better link.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    18. Re:How much is your time worth by DahGhostfacedFiddlah · · Score: 4, Funny

      See, this is exactly why I adore /. Name one other popular site where you'd get ten bites on a troll that 99% of the population doesn't even understand.

      Right down to the Where is the "Ignorant" mod tag? signature. 10/10 for you, sir.

    19. Re:How much is your time worth by Aceticon · · Score: 5, Funny

      Mod parent up!

      I'm an EE (non-practicing) and he's right. This is even worse with twisted pair 'cause the EM emissions come out all twisted and curvy and can cause serious interference with other cables.

      It's also important to always cut your cable in multiples of 30 cm if you're going to use Gigabyte Ethernet to make sure your wave always gets to the other side in phase - you don't want a phase mismatch to happen.

      Don't forget to terminate everything - i can tell you that the actual speed of a cable where one of the sides is neither connected to anything nor properly terminated is ZERO bps.

      Last but not least, always make sure that both sides of the connection send equal amounts of data so that the cable doesn't get a transmission fatigue problem due to the electrons always going in the same direction.

      Here you have it, the secrets of professional cable making and usage at your fingertips: don't waste them!!!

    20. Re:How much is your time worth by wvmarle · · Score: 4, Funny

      That is exactly what any self-respecting BOFH would do. Except that he would find a way to have the boss pay for the materials as well. Double.

    21. Re:How much is your time worth by the_B0fh · · Score: 5, Funny
    22. Re:How much is your time worth by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The real acid test would be to get one of these TDR units, buy 10 cables from each of two or three reputable companies and compare it to the results from 10 cables done in-house.

      All this talk without an objective stress test is pretty pointless.

    23. Re:How much is your time worth by shogun · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But are they exactly the right length to pull from A to B, or do you have some coiled up uglies?

      A forward thinking IT professional knows to leave some slack in the cables, otherwise plate tectonics makes fools of us all.

    24. Re:How much is your time worth by adolf · · Score: 4, Interesting

      My opinion is a little different: Don't build them one at a time. And don't buy them one at a time, either.

      Just pick up a bunch of different lengths of pre-terminated cable from the good folks at deep-surplus.com. Buy a bunch of 1-foot cables, along with some 3-foot cables. 5-foot cables. 7-foot cables. 12-foot cables. So on, so forth. Then, when you need a cable of a given length, you've (gasp!) already got one!

      They're easy to use, too! Just reach up on the shelf, and get one! Way faster than finding the strippers, the cutters, the crimpers, the box of ends, and the box of wire... And then you've still got to cut, strip, sort, cut, insert, and crimp the shit together, before doing the same thing on the other end.

      Feh.

      They cables from deep-surplus cheap, they're Chinese, they're durable, consistent[1], and I have never had a bad cable after years of doing this whenever possible. Plus, every order comes with a bag of Skittles.

      The trick to making this economical and time-efficient is to put it all on one PO.

      [1]: Speaking of consistency: I do have the occasional cable that I make myself go wonky, in applications where prefab cabling doesn't apply, like UV-rated Cat5 up a radio tower. This, despite using a good crimper with a good die, and high-quality ends which are made specifically for the wire in question, and a lot of practice to develop decent workmanship. The Chinese cables are consistently more consistent, and always work.

    25. Re:How much is your time worth by kiyoshigawa · · Score: 5, Funny

      Orange and white, Orange. Green and White, Blue. Blue and White, Green. Brown and White, Brown.

      Just Remember: OverWeight Olga Gives Willingly, But Betty White Gives Bitchin'-Wild Blowjobs.

      --
      So sayeth Tim.
    26. Re:How much is your time worth by jemenake · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And here's another tip when making several cables at once...

      Make one long cable of the total length of all of the cables you want, and terminate the two ends and test the cable. Then, you know those two ends are good. Then, for your first "finished" cable, snip off the length you want, and terminate the snipped end. Then, test the cable. If it fails, you know which end needs fixing.

      Then, with the remaining slightly-less-long cable, terminate the snipped end of that, and test. Then, snip off the next length you need, etc...

      I used to just pull off the length I needed from a spool, crimp the two ends, and test. But, if the cable failed the test, and I couldn't see where the problem was, I'd have to flip a coin to decide which end to re-do first. The above method avoids the coin flip. You'll know which end you have to re-do.

  2. Always buy them by igb · · Score: 5, Interesting

    We have TDR equipment and appropriate tools, but we still buy patch cables in bulk. We tested an assortment of ones we had made with cheap crimping tools, and they were all horrible. We can make decent ones, but it takes longer and costs more than buying them pre-tested.

    1. Re:Always buy them by maxume · · Score: 5, Informative

      Depending on wages and such, the commercial cables could easily have 10x the labor and still be cheaper.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
  3. meh, easy... by polle404 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Monster cables, dude, Monster cables...

    --

    ~men are from earth. women are from earth. deal with it.~
    1. Re:meh, easy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Hey, I just spent $100 on a 3ft gold-wired Cat6 cable, and I can tell that my bits are coming in cleaner.

    2. Re:meh, easy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Nah, I tested some ethernet cables I made with 4 pairs of wire coathangers and they performed just as well as the Monster Cable ethernet cord!

    3. Re:meh, easy... by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 4, Funny

      What a bunch of crap. My data transfers so much cleaner over my Monster gold-plated ethernet cabling, I can easily hear the difference. Just because you're bit-deaf doesn't mean that there isn't real benefit to the rest of us.

      Moran.

    4. Re:meh, easy... by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 5, Funny

      Hey, I just spent $100 on a 3ft gold-wired Cat6 cable, and I can tell that my bits are coming in cleaner.

      I hate to tell you, but the gold plated wire is doing nothing for you. The secret is in the directional indicator. That's where the magic happens.

    5. Re:meh, easy... by ProfessionalCookie · · Score: 5, Funny

      Bet crimping that was a bitch

  4. Whatever saves time by boaworm · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I've spent many hours debugging things that ended up being poor quality TP connectors, but I've also saved countless more hours producing them myself compared to running to the store everytime.

    For any permanent installation, go for the molded cables. For anything thats temporary, just pick whatever cable is closest.

    And you're not guaranteed to be free of problems just because you buy expensive stuff, I've had problems with Dell PowerEdge switches and factory-made, properly molded STP cables, the RJ45 plug was simply too small and the copper pins didnt connect every time. Really odd, we had to throw away a whole box of STP patch cables for that reason.

    --
    Probable impossibilities are to be preferred to improbable possibilities.
    Aristotele
  5. Create your own but TEST the cables... by nweaver · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've learned the hard way when setting up a couple of clusters: You MUST use custom-made, cut to length cables to prevent a huge rats nets in the server room. Buying precut cables is a disaster. I had to rip out and completely rewire one cluster because I made that mistake.

    However, you need to TEST the cables. And not just by plugging in and making sure it works, but a full ethernet validation tester.

    I've been very happy with the Fluke Cable-IQ qualification tester, which doesn't just make sure that the wiring is correct, but actually tests the cable up to gigabit speed to make sure everything is kosher.

    --
    Test your net with Netalyzr
    1. Re:Create your own but TEST the cables... by digitalunity · · Score: 4, Informative

      This is the most sensible response so far.

      The submitter neglected to mention how often this scenario is encountered though. If this happens frequently, buying a cable tester probably makes a lot of sense and will save a lot of money, time and headaches in the future.

      However, if this happens very rarely, just buy the cable and be done with it.

      --
      You can't legislate goodness. Let each to his own destiny, by will of his freely made choices.
    2. Re:Create your own but TEST the cables... by MasterOfMagic · · Score: 5, Informative

      And at $1,270.99, it's an absolute steal!

      Unless he's making hundreds/thousands of patch cables, I think the original poster is better off buying a commercially made cable.

    3. Re:Create your own but TEST the cables... by jefftp · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If you're testing to certify cat5, cat5e, or cat6 you need a cable tester. If you cannot certify the cable to a category you cannot guarantee the cable will work. So the cable is always suspect when you have connectivity issues.

      Keep the OSI model in mind, errors at the physical layer cause the whole stack to collapse.

      The advantage of cabling over wireless is that you can guarantee that the cable will work where there's no such promise with unlicensed RF spectrum.

  6. He's right... by Ecuador · · Score: 5, Funny

    You can certainly screw it up if you do it yourself, for example you could forget the signal directional markings and then the signal would not know which way to go. Why do you think there are Ethernet cables at $500/1.5m? You think respectable companies are just trying to steal your money?

    --
    Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent. Polar Scope Align for iOS
  7. Don't cross the data streams! by mc1138 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I took a network troubleshooting class in college, and we had to test the integrity of data runs that we pulled ourselves and if they weren't good enough we had to do them again till we got our numbers down. I'm sure there are hundreds of data companies that would disagree with you on what it takes to make quality cables and I'm sure "expensive dies" and other nonsense like that really don't help that much when it comes to quality. All you need is a steady hand and lots of practice.

  8. Pointy Haired Nitwitt by nefus · · Score: 5, Funny

    I think you have a pointy haired boss who can't do anything himself. Thats why he has other people do the IT. I've run into these types of people before. He's probably the kind of guy that staples the crap out of cat cable and wonders why his network is down.

  9. If the Belkin cable fails, you can blame Belkin by Glass+Goldfish · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why put your neck on the line? If you make a cable and anything goes wrong, even if it happens later on, you're blamed. If something happens with the Belkin cable, you can blame Belkin. Even if it isn't Belkin's fault. Especially after your boss has told you to do something. Whenever you go up against an authority figure, the best you can hope for is proving them wrong. It's better to say "What a great idea boss!" and buy the cable. If it works, great. If it doesn't work, don't rub it in. Besides, do you really want to crimp your own cables?

    1. Re:If the Belkin cable fails, you can blame Belkin by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If something happens with the Belkin cable, you can blame Belkin.

      That presumes:

      1. You make crappy cables.
      2. Your boss is watching over your shoulder to see whether it's a homemade or bought cable.
      3. All of your bought cables are labeled by the manufacturer.
      4. Your boss cares beyond "is it fixed yet?"

      Besides, do you really want to crimp your own cables?

      Yeah, but I'm one of those crazy people who fix their own fences, hang their own ceiling fans, build treehouses for their kids, and generally like to do things not conducive to the strictly consumer lifestyle.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  10. Rewiring our building by Peter+Simpson · · Score: 5, Informative

    We had a contractor come in and rewire our facility. They ran raw CAT 6 and hand terminated it, then TDR'd each run.
    Your boss is unclear on the tools needed and the difficulty...just simple hand crimpers were all they needed. There's going to be
    an impedance bump at the RJ anyway...the cable's not twisted there.

    As to making them yourself or buying patch cables? It's way cheaper to buy them (I like L-Com) but if you need one *right now*,
    (or a custom length) it's cheap to have a crimp tool, some RJs and a roll of cable handy in the corner of the office.

  11. Doubt he's correct, but believe him anyway! by zaf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Wait a minute. Your boss is telling you to buy cables instead of toiling to make your own, and you're _complaining_? I don't think a self-terminated link of CAT6 will have the slightest trouble maintaining 20 megabits, but that's not the point.

    Word of advice, take his word for him and nod. If he's willing to spend money to make your job easier, then keep that job!

  12. Not worth the responsibility by hhaarrvv · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Your cables would be fine, but if ANYTHING ever goes wrong the first thing your boss will say is "It's probably that damn cable you made when I told you to buy one." It's just not worth it.

  13. Re:your boss sucks at making ethernet cables by causality · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Obviously your boss isn't good at making cables. While if you lack the skill to do something like make cables with care you're going to have problems, there's no reason that you can't make your own cables and have them perform just as well as the ones made by a machine in a factory.

    They can put it under the "Tech" section if they like, but this is really another disappointing Ask Slashdot. It's disappointing because too many of these have this format: "my boss at work wants me to do X, but I'd really rather do Y; what are the merits of X versus Y?" All of them need to be summarily rejected, with a polite e-mail sent to the submitter which says "within the bounds of the law, you need to do what your boss asks you to do whether or not you necessarily agree with it. If you cannot convince your boss to do otherwise, and this is a problem for you, perhaps you should consider working elsewhere."

    The other disappointing category of Ask Slashdot-type submissions are those questions that are factual in nature and have only one correct (and rather well-known, easily researched) answer. Asking a large group with varying levels of expertise makes a lot of sense when there are multiple possible solutions to a problem and there is room to be creative. It makes no sense when it's more of a yes/no question -- remember the recent Ask Slashdot that asked whether spam is increased by trying to opt-out of spam e-mails? That's an excellent case in point, and not atypical either. That should have been an "Ask Google", not an "Ask Slashdot".

    I think it's a shame that the quality of these particular submissions are on the decline. There's nothing inherently wrong with the "Ask Slashdot" format and there are a lot of very knowledgable people who browse this site. I'd love to see how creative they can be. It's just never going to be as good as it easily could be when it's handled this way.

    --
    It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
  14. Your boss is a dumbass.. by ockers · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Ask him how the premise wiring in every commercial building in the world is installed. They order patch cables from some commercial patch cable vendor for every run, riiiiiiiight.

    Also, CAT5e is fine for what you are doing. I agree with the previous poster that you could practically use tin cans and a string for this.

    These special dies, jacks, and connectors are called "CAT5" parts and you can buy them at Home Depot I think. Does that make them "special" ?

  15. Agreed. by dr_wheel · · Score: 5, Informative

    Yes, you can use handmade cables that are as good as mass-produced factory cables. But that really isn't the issue.

    It's just not worth the time spent to cut and crimp your own lines anymore. In my experience, it was a more common practice years ago in IT. That may have had something to do with the fact that there weren't nearly as many PC's or ethernet ports in buildings as there are today.

    My advice: Find a good supplier (i.e. not one that charges $800 for a 6 ft. adamantium-coated cable) and do something else with the rest of your time.

  16. Re:your boss sucks at making ethernet cables by timeOday · · Score: 5, Insightful

    All of them need to be summarily rejected, with a polite e-mail sent to the submitter which says "within the bounds of the law, you need to do what your boss asks you to do whether or not you necessarily agree with it. If you cannot convince your boss to do otherwise, and this is a problem for you, perhaps you should consider working elsewhere."

    Bull! Entirely aside from what the submitter should do to protect their job, it is topical on slashdot to question whether DIY ethernet cables are any good, just as people on a home repair DIY site might discuss whether doing drywall yourself is worthwhile.

    When the only answer slashdotters can imagine is "just pay somebody else to do it," that is the day there is no point reading here.

  17. Re:your boss sucks at making ethernet cables by Thornburg · · Score: 5, Funny

    When the only answer slashdotters can imagine is "just pay somebody else to do it," that is the day there is no point reading here.

    Hey, that was pretty good. What would you charge to make my posts for me?

  18. Re:I make my own all the time. by Guido+del+Confuso · · Score: 5, Funny

    Seconded. I make all my own patch ca$lw7 and3@0 datt trd!@m34ssion ha*F aslwts bben3n vereryu reliabl3233e.

  19. Re:your boss sucks at making ethernet cables by Phasma+Felis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They can put it under the "Tech" section if they like, but this is really another disappointing Ask Slashdot. It's disappointing because too many of these have this format: "my boss at work wants me to do X, but I'd really rather do Y; what are the merits of X versus Y?" All of them need to be summarily rejected, with a polite e-mail sent to the submitter which says "within the bounds of the law, you need to do what your boss asks you to do whether or not you necessarily agree with it. If you cannot convince your boss to do otherwise, and this is a problem for you, perhaps you should consider working elsewhere."

    I don't know about you, but I was hired for my technical expertise. It is part of my job description to let management know when they are making bad technical decisions. If they still insist after that, then sure, I gotta shrug my shoulders and do it; but until then, it's my job to find out the facts and make sure they stay informed...which is exactly what the questioner is doing.

    Save the "shut up and do as you're told" bit for McDonald's burger-flippers. We're professionals here.

  20. Drill test by salesgeek · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Best advice I've ever heard on cabling:

    If you have to drill holes to run it, make your own. If you don't buy it premade.

    Second best advice:

    Test it all. Even if it comes in a shrink wrap package.

    --
    -- $G
  21. Bad Attitude by PinkyDead · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This principle of going with the provider you can sue over the one you can rely on is becoming far too prevalent.

    I'm not saying that there's anything wrong with Belkin, and I think in this situation the pre-made cables are the better option.

    However, in a more general sense, I'd prefer that my systems didn't go down rather than being able to point the finger when they do. If you are the front end provider of a service your customers are not going to be placated by the fact that, even though all their data is gone, you are currently seeking glorious retribution from the guy that solders the LEDs onto your motherboards (or whatever).

    On top of this, when things go tits up at three o'clock in the morning - you can be sure the Belkin shop won't be open.

    --
    Genesis 1:32 And God typed :wq!
  22. Re:Just do what your boss wants by Ephemeriis · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's clearly not your company's core business to make their own patch cables. It may be fun for you to wittle down your own toothpics from lincoln logs but if it's not in your job description it ain't going to fly. Seriously, just buy the damn stuff and do what your boss has asked.

    Exactly.

    We buy all our patch cables in bulk. There's no reason for me to assemble a new cable every time we want to patch in another machine. It may not take long to throw together a 6' cable, but why waste any time at all? Break open a package and plug it in. Done.

    We do keep a couple spools on hand, and some wiring tools. If we absolutely need a 15' cable and we don't have any on hand we'll throw one together...

    Or if we really need a new wall jack somewhere... It's good to have the capability to do some of your own wiring if necessary... But for anything substantial we'll contract someone else to do that, too.

    But, really, that isn't what I'm paid to do.

    --
    "Work is the curse of the drinking classes." -Oscar Wilde
  23. This is not a time/money issue by exploder · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is a CYA issue. Your boss does not want to explain to HIS boss, when a cable goes bad and the company is losing $large_number per hour until it is diagnosed and fixed, that he authorized one of his tech guys to use "homemade" cables.

    --
    Yo dawg, I heard you like the Ackermann function, so OH GOD OH GOD OH GOD
    1. Re:This is not a time/money issue by halber_mensch · · Score: 5, Funny

      This is a CYA issue. Your boss does not want to explain to HIS boss, when a cable goes bad and the company is losing $large_number per hour until it is diagnosed and fixed, that he authorized one of his tech guys to use "homemade" cables.

      I absolutely agree. You can't trust an IT professional's "homemade" cables any more than you can trust a cook's "homemade" meal. That's why you should always buy your work instead of doing it yourself. I went to Outback Steakhouse yesterday and ate the best steak I ever had, and do you know why? It was because THEIR COOKS DIDN'T MAKE IT! They did the sensible thing and took my order across the street to McDonald's, returning to me (at a marginal reseller's markup) a quality steak from a trusted manufacturer. And if the steak had been bad, the cooks had done their duty to their job security and could just say to their boss, "Hey, it came from McDonald's! And I'm a valued employee that has skills you need, like being able to run across a busy street during a dinner rush and buy something from another company! So you should definitely just blame McDonald's and let me get back to flirting with the hostess!" Bingo! The boss is happy, the customer gets mediocre service and quality at insane profit, and the cooks don't have any value to the business at all! That's exactly how every business should operate! Because if you trust your workers to do the jobs you hired them for, you're just setting yourself up for disappointment. Because since you weren't able to purchase your employees at an employee store and instead had to choose them yourself, they obviously must be as unqualified for their jobs as you know you are.

      --
      perl -e "eval pack(q{H*},join q{},qw{70 72696e74207061636b28717b482a7d2c717b343 637323635363534323533343430617d293b})"
    2. Re:This is not a time/money issue by exploder · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Doesn't help when the first question is, "who supplied that cable"? I don't know if you've been in a "root cause" meeting, but they DO get all Sherlock Holmes on that shit, I assure you.

      --
      Yo dawg, I heard you like the Ackermann function, so OH GOD OH GOD OH GOD
  24. Not as such... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They are made at specific lengths for marketing reasons. All of the "transmission line" characteristics of Ethernet cable have been solved for every length within the specified maximum.

    I have a whole data center (~32 rows of 22 racks) fully cabled with lengths ranging from 100 meters to 5 inches (crossover between 1U boxes). They are cut to custom lengths, source to destination. Where their port is on the router and where they were placed in the tray add and subtract inches here and there. They run to the patchpanels in bundles about 7 inches in diameter. We have no problems with crosstalk, reflections, intermod and what have you.

    If this were coaxial Ethernet we could have a fun discussion... but those days are well behind us.

  25. Re:your boss sucks at making ethernet cables by kimvette · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Here's how people screw up cables:

    1. They just match colors at either end and don't pick a standard pinout (T568A or B). That might result in a usable 10mbps link, but it won't work at 100 or 1000.

    2. They mix 568A and 568B - usually wiring A in the wall, and using premade B patch cables. Instant crosstalk. OK on very short runs, but anything longer than 80' to 100' will become problematic with many NICs.

    3. They score the insulation. Use the right tools, and adjust the tension on the stripper.

    4. They only strip 1/2" of insulation and try to organize the cables and jam it in, so you don't get a clean connection on all the conductors - or might miss one completely. Strip the insulation back 2", then you have room to sort the conductors, trim them neatly then you can slide them all the way to the end of the terminator, then the clips will "bite" each conductor twice - cleanly, resulting in a good connection and a strong link.

    Your boss sounds like an idiot and a hack.

    If you're going from the wall to the PC I'd say yeah, buy a premade cable and save on labor. Just buy a good one. Believe it or not monoprice's cheap stuff is extremely good.

    From the patch panel to the switch, it depends on the length. Will a premade cable fit the length well? Go premade. If not, then make the cables.

    Ultimately though, your boss is the boss. If he insists on hanging patch cables loose through the wall, etc. just document it in email, send it to him with your recommendation, etc. so that when he comes back to you complaining that it looks hack or that the cabling was overpriced, you can remind him that you recommended otherwise.

    --
    The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50