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Thursday, December 11, 2014

How to Terminate a Patch Panel



Steps

1Strip the cable of its protective outside jacket about 3–6 inches (7.6–15.2 cm) from the end. This can be done with the cabling scissors by applying pressure from the scissors to the cable and rotating the scissors around the cable. After you have punctured the cables jacket, you should be able pull the jacket off easily leaving exposed wires.



2Stripping the cable can cut and damage the wires at the area that we cut the cable so we want to expose about 6 more inches of fresh wires. Most twisted pair Cat5, Cat5e and Cat6 cables have a small string inside the cable to assist with this.

3If your cable has the small string, make a small cut in the jacket of the cable, making sure not to touch any wires, and then use the string to pull towards the fresh end of the cable exposing about 6 inches (15.2 cm) of cable. Cut the string after you have enough exposed cable.

4If your cable does not have the small string, make a small cut in the jacket described above and gently pull all of the wires together in one hand and pull the jacket in the opposite direction.
All Cat5,Cat5e and Cat6 cables follow a standard color pattern for the individual wires. Blue, Orange, Green and Brown. There are two wires per color. White/Blue and Blue, White/Orange and Orange, White/Green and Green, White/Brown and Brown. If you look at the back side of your patch panel, you will see the corresponding colors where you will terminate the cable to.
Note: There are two color patterns, T568A and T568B. Make sure to terminate both sides of the cable on the same pattern. If you have already terminated one side of the cable, look to see what pattern was used! If you have not already terminated, choose a standard that you will always use. Both patterns will produce the same results.

5After choosing the correct pattern, choose the port on the patch panel you wish the cable to connect to. It is general practice to terminate in ascending order so start at the lowest number. First cable should be terminate to the 1st port and so on.

6Untwist the wires completely to the jacket. Place the wires into the appropriate color slot on the patch panel. Make sure to place the wires as tightly as possible in the slots in regards to the jacket. There should be as little exposed and untwisted wire as possible to keep the signal strength as high as possible. Make sure to place the White/Blue in the White/Blue spot and not the solid Blue spot. The White/Color wire is not the same as the solid color.

7Terminate each wire. After all the wires are in the correct spot and double checked to make sure as little amount of exposed wires will be left as possible, use the punch down tool with the 110 blade and terminate each wire individually. The 110 blade will fully cover the wire connector on the patch panel. Push down until the tool clicks and cuts the end of the wire off. Repeat this step if the wire was not fully cut.

8Secure the cable to the patch panel with a zip tie if there is a slot or tab for a zip tie.

9Use a cable tester to assure that you correctly terminated all the wires.

Warnings

Keep your fingers out of the way when using a 110 cut blade on a punch down tool. One slip and you could get a nasty wound.
Do not terminate the cable using the possibly damaged wires. Make sure to strip an extra 3–6 inches (7.6–15.2 cm) and use that section when terminating.
Things You'll Need

Punch Down Tool with a 110 Blade

Cabling Scissors

Solid Wire Cat3, Cat5, Cat5e or Cat6 Cables to Terminate

Appropriate Patch Panel for Cable to Terminate - Ex: Cat5e Cable should be terminated to a Cat5e Patch Panel.

Cable Tester - Optional but heavily encouraged.

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