D
Don Y
Hi Peter,
Ah ----------------------------------------------^^^^^^^^^^^^
So, neither "COTS" nor "hand-made" (by you/your staff)
There are noticeable differences in *jacket* O.D. -- depending on
material, manufacturing process, etc. (some almost seem to be
*tubing* through which the conductors are "pulled" while others
are more conformally coated "bundles" of conductors).
IME, usually the diameter of the conductors is enough to drive
the jacket crimp correctly. E.g., any "slop" in the jacket gets
squished over to the edges.
When making a cable, I give a gentle but firm tug on the jacket
after the crimp.
I also don't make cables that are expected to see lots of abuse!
Why tempt fate? :>
I have recently had to deal with this issue at work.
We have found that a lot of RJ45s are not reliably crimped. Maybe a 5%
failure rate.
These are Chinese-made cables which we buy in, custom made, 1000+.
Ah ----------------------------------------------^^^^^^^^^^^^
So, neither "COTS" nor "hand-made" (by you/your staff)
It appears they were *adequately* crimped i.e. the compression tool
did penetrate far enough.
So what happened?
Probably they didn't use the correct wire size for the contacts.
There is a separate issue which is that a second crimp is used to hold
the cable insulation in place, as a form of strain relief. This also
need the correct cable diameter to be used, otherwise you get an
unreliable connector.
There are noticeable differences in *jacket* O.D. -- depending on
material, manufacturing process, etc. (some almost seem to be
*tubing* through which the conductors are "pulled" while others
are more conformally coated "bundles" of conductors).
IME, usually the diameter of the conductors is enough to drive
the jacket crimp correctly. E.g., any "slop" in the jacket gets
squished over to the edges.
When making a cable, I give a gentle but firm tug on the jacket
after the crimp.
I also don't make cables that are expected to see lots of abuse!
Why tempt fate? :>