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Old July 16th 19, 02:29 PM posted to alt.comp.hardware
tb
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Posts: 66
Default Ethernet Crossover or Patch Cable

On 7/15/2019 at 6:30:17 PM Paul wrote:

tb wrote:
On 7/15/2019 at 2:59:53 PM John McGaw wrote:

On 7/15/2019 1:41 PM, tb wrote:
I am thinking about getting AT&T Fiber internet and do the setup
myself.

The fiberoptic wall plug is in the living room of my apartment.
I would like to keep my desktop PC and fiberoptic modem in my
bedroom. The PC has an Ethernet port but no Wi-Fi, so the
connection modem/PC would be via Ethernet cable, that's why I
want to keep PC and modem close to each other.

But I have to find a solution for the connection between the
fiberoptic plug in the living room and the modem in my bedroom.

The idea is to purchase a long Ethernet cable (about 50 ft) to
do that. Do I need to purchase a crossover or a patch Ethernet
cable?

I see them both available online...

If you have a "fiberoptic wall plug" in one room and the
"fiberoptic modem" in another room in another room it seems as
though you would need a fiber between the two not a standard
cable, crossed over not not. Are you leaving something out? Most
"fiber" providers include a little magic box in the system that
terminates their fiber and converts the signals into standard
Ethernet which then go to a standard modem or modem/router/switch
box. Do you have the box which does the fiber-to-Ethernet
conversion? If so, where is it located?


Well, I live in an apartment complex that was recently wired for
fiber internet. AT&T contractors did the wiring. The apartment
management sent out a memo saying that each unit is ready for
fiberoptic internet. All we need to do is to subscribe to one of
AT&T's Fiber plans, hook up the modem etc. that AT&T sends, go
through the registration process, and voilĂ*.

All I can tell you is that they installed a wall plug in the living
room of my apartment. It looks like one of those telephone wall
plugs for the good old landlines where you plug in the cable on one
end and the other end plugs in into the phone. Only this one would
go from the fiberoptic wall plug to the modem and it would be an
Ethernet cable, not a telephone cable.

Hope I have clarified the issue.


So you see an RJ45.

Is the connector labeled at all ?

A fiberoptic wall plug would take a fiber
optic cable, like an SC or an MT. You should
say it's an RJ45 (used for Ethernet with 8 pins,
abused for other defacto standard purposes).

I think if one end has MDI/MDIX capable equipment,
for 8 pin Ethernet, you don't have to worry about
cable type. It's older Ethernet equipment with
100BT and the resulting four wires, that is a problem.
As long as there is one piece of gear that is
GbE and has 8 pins, then it can probably use MDI
to select which pairs to talk to.

Paul


Thanks, Paul.

--
tb