0% found this document useful (0 votes)
423 views4 pages

Cat5 Wiring Color Codes 2004

This document provides information on wiring color codes for Cat5 and Cat5e Ethernet cables. It discusses: 1) The four wire pairs in the cable and their colors, with one solid color wire and one white-colored striped wire per pair. 2) The T568A and T568B wiring standards that differ only in pin assignments for the orange and green wire pairs. 3) How to make a straight-through cable for connecting a device to a hub and a crossover cable for directly connecting two devices.

Uploaded by

HAMIS
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
423 views4 pages

Cat5 Wiring Color Codes 2004

This document provides information on wiring color codes for Cat5 and Cat5e Ethernet cables. It discusses: 1) The four wire pairs in the cable and their colors, with one solid color wire and one white-colored striped wire per pair. 2) The T568A and T568B wiring standards that differ only in pin assignments for the orange and green wire pairs. 3) How to make a straight-through cable for connecting a device to a hub and a crossover cable for directly connecting two devices.

Uploaded by

HAMIS
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 4

Communication Wiring Color Codes

Cat 5 & 5e Network

Color Codes for RJ-45 Ethernet Plug


Eight-conductor data cable (Cat 3 or Cat 5) contains 4 pairs of wires. Each pair consists of a solid color wire and a
white and color striped wire. Each of the pairs are twisted together. To maintain reliability on Ethernet, you should
not untwist them any more than necessary (about 1/4 inch).
The pairs designated for 10BaseT Ethernet are orange and green. The other two pairs, brown and blue, are
unused. The connections shown are specifically for an RJ45 plug. The wall jack may be wired in a different
sequence because the wires may be crossed inside the jack. The jack should either come with a wiring diagram or
at least designate pin numbers that you can match up to the color code below.

There are two wiring standards for these cables, called T-568A and T-568B. They differ only in pin assignments,
not in uses of the various colors. The illustration above shows both standards. With the T-568B specification the
orange and green pairs are located on pins 1, 2 and 3, 6 respectively. The T-568A specification reverses the
orange and green connections, so that the blue and orange pairs are on the center 4 pins, which makes it
more compatible with the telco voice connections.
T-568A is supposed to be the standard for new installations, and T-568B is the alternative. However, most off-theshelf data equipment and cables seem to be wired to T568B.

Pin Number Designations


Here are the pin number designations for both standards:

T-568B

Pin

Color

Pair Descrtipion

1 white/orange

TxData +

orange

TxData -

white/green

RecvData +

blue

Unused

white/blue

Unused

green

RecvData -

7 white/brown

Unused

Unused

brown

T-568A

Pin

Color

white/green

RecvData +

green

RecvData -

3 white/orange

TxData +

blue

Unused

white/blue

Unused

orange

TxData -

7 white/brown

Unused

Unused

brown

Pair Description

Note: Odd pin numbers are always the striped wires..

Straight-Through vs Cross-Over
In general, the patch cords that you use with your Ethernet connections are "straight-through", which means that
pin 1 of the plug on one end is connected to pin 1 of the plug on the other end (for either standard). The only time
you cross connections in 10BaseT is when you connect two Ethernet devices directly together without a hub or
connect two hubs together. Then you need a "cross-over" patch cable, which crosses the transmit and receive pairs.
An easy way remember how to make a cross-over cable is to wire one end with the T-568A standard and the other
with the T-568B standard.

Termination
UTP cables are terminated with standard connectors, jacks and punchdowns. The jack/plug is often referred to as a
"RJ-45", but that's a telco designation for the "modular 8 pin connector" terminated with a USOC pinout used for
telephones. The male connector on the end of a patchcord is called a "plug" and the receptacle on the wall outlet is
a "jack."
In LANs, as spec'ed by 568, there are two possible pinouts, called T568A and T568B, that differ only in which
color coded pairs are connected - pair 2 and 3 are reversed. Either work equally well, as long as you don't mix
them! If you always use only one version, you're OK, but if you mix A and B in a cable run, you will get crossed
pairs!
The cable pairs are color coded as
Pair 1 is white-blue/blue,
Pair 2 white-orange/orange,
Pair 3 is white-green/green
Pair 4 is white-brown/brown.

Jacks usually have punchdowns on the back or can be terminated without


punchdowns using special manufacturer's tools or even a cover for the
connector. Again, you MUST keep the twists as close to the receptacle as
possible to minimize crosstalk.
Note that Cat 3 jacks and all plugs are going to use these color codes.
However, Cat 5 jacks have internal connections that continue the twists as
close to the pins in the jacks as possible. Thus the pinout on the back of the
jacks will not usually follow these layouts! Always follow the color codes on
the back of the jacks to insure proper connections!

Crossover Cables:
Normal cables that connect a PC/NIC card to a hub are wired straight through. That is pin 1 is connected to pin 1,
pin 2 to pin 2, etc. However, if you are simply connecting two PCs together without a hub, you need to use a
crossover cable made by reversing pair 2 and 3 in the cable, the two pairs used for transmisson by Ethernet. The
easy way to make a crossover cable is to make one end to T568A color coding and the other end to T568B. Then
the pairs will be reversed.
Punchdowns:
Punchdowns come in 4 varieties: 110, 66, Bix and Krone. Most popular for LANs is the 110 (on the left), for
telcos it's the 66 (on the right), and the Bix and Krone are rare (price, proprietary designs, etc.)

110 block

66 block

Color Codes For Punchdowns:


Punchdowns of all types are always made with the pairs in order with the
white/stripe wire first, then the colored wire, Pair 1(w/blue-blue), Pair 2 (w/orangeorange), Pair 3 (w/green-green), Pair 4 (w/brown-brown). (This color code is
remembered by BLOG - BLueOrangeGreen and brown)

Back to Design

You might also like