COLOR-CODE STANDARDS
Last updated: 8/9/2004
Again, please bear with me... Let's start with simple
pin-out diagrams of the two types of UTP Ethernet cables and watch how committees
can make a can of worms out of them. Here are the diagrams:

Note that the TX (transmitter) pins are connected
to corresponding RX (receiver) pins, plus to plus and minus to minus. And
that you must use a crossover cable to connect units with identical
interfaces. If you use a straight-through cable, one of the two units
must, in effect, perform the cross-over function.
Two wire color-code standards apply: EIA/TIA 568A and EIA/TIA
568B. The codes are commonly depicted with RJ-45 jacks as
follows (the view is from the front of the jacks):
If we apply the 568A color code and show all eight wires,
our pin-out looks like this:

Note that pins 4, 5, 7, and 8 and the blue and brown pairs
are not used in either standard. Quite contrary to what you may read
elsewhere, these pins and wires are not used or required to implement 100BASE-TX
duplexing--they are just plain wasted.
However, the actual cables are not physically that simple. In
the diagrams, the orange pair of wires are not adjacent. The blue pair
is upside-down. The right ends match RJ-45 jacks and the left ends
do not. If, for example, we invert the left side of the 568A "straight"-thru
cable to match a 568A jack--put one 180° twist in the entire cable from end-to-end--and
twist together and rearrange the appropriate pairs, we get the following
can-of-worms:
This
further emphasizes, I hope, the importance of the word "twist" in
making network cables which will work. You cannot use an flat-untwisted
telephone cable for a network cable. Furthermore, you must use a pair
of twisted wires to connect a set of transmitter pins to their corresponding
receiver pins. You cannot use a wire from one pair and another wire
from a different pair.
Keeping the above principles in mind, we can
simplify the diagram for a 568A straight-thru cable by untwisting the
wires, except the 180° twist in the entire cable, and bending the ends upward. Likewise,
if we exchange the green and orange pairs in the 568A diagram we will get
a simplified diagram for a 568B straight-thru cable. If we cross the
green and orange pairs in the 568A diagram we will arrive at a simplified
diagram for a crossover cable. All three are shown below.
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