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Using Rj45 Coupler To Extend Cat6 Phone Line

Using RJ45 coupler to extend phone line?

**t's for a business...the contractor already routed cat6 cable connected to the rj11 jack (phone jack) across the building. the cat6 cable routed to the phonline jack just needs to be extended about 20 more feet in order to reach the NID(at&t box outside). can i extend this already existing cat6 phoneline cable using rj45 connectors/couplers?(they are laying around, still brand new)

i was told i could use cat5 or cat6..using cat 6 would just be pointlessly more expensive? It's already there.

Using RJ45 coupler to extend CAT6 phone line?

Can I extend a phone line (set up as a cat 6 cable hooked to an rj11 jack(phone outlet in wall) thats going to be used as a DSL hook up....? Can i extend this cat 6 cable using a RJ-45 coupler (using the split end of the cat6 with rj45 connectors and rj45 coupler to extend this cat 6 phone line) Would this work?? Someone at a store told me to do this. I already ordered the coupler and the 2 connectors to extend the line with more cat 6 cable.. (50 feet of spare cat 6 cable just laying around) I didn't set it up like this... the contractor did. I was just asked to extend the cat6 phoneline to the AT&T box outside.

Is there a way to extend my cable internet line?

Cable internet as in broadband?

It would then use a cat5e or cat6 cable (both will work) with an RJ45 connector. You can either get a cable the right length, or get an RJ45 coupler and another Ethernet (cat 5e or cat6) cable. Whichever is cheaper, if same price, get the single cable, and forget the coupler.

Will the length of an ethernet cable connecting a modem and router affect speed?

Yes.There is a speed drop of 1 m and 100 m cable. But it is a millisecond. But for your case I don’t think the distance more than 10 meters. So it will not affect the speed much.Cat 6 cable maximum length limit is 100 meters (328 ft). This includes of 90 meters (295 ft) of solid ‘horizontal’ cabling between the patch panel and the wall jack, plus 5 meters (16 ft) of standard patch cable between each jack and the attached device (router/desktop/laptop).After 100 m, signal strength will drop off vertically, due to loss of bandwidth from signal loss over the length of the run, increased noise from cross talk, and leakage.

What is a method to connect an RJ11 cable into an RJ45 router?

The simple answer is that you don’t, RJ-11 cables have a maximum of 4 conductors (wires) are usually rated CAT-3 at the highest. Where RJ-45 has a max of 8 conductors and CAT-5 rated cable is the lowest rating you will typically find. So they are inherently incompatible.That being said, I think you could use CAT-3 cable with 4 conductors with a RF-45 connector to force the issue, and it might work, but I would guess there would be a speed/performance issue caused by cross-talk and interference and it would get worse as the cable got longer. This only applies to 10/100, as gigabit uses and needs all 8 conductors.If you tried to plug an RJ-11 telephone cable/connector into an router/switch port, it will not work because the RJ-11 would only connect to the center four pins, or pins 3–6 on the RJ-45. RJ-45 Ethernet carries signal on pins 1,2 and 3,6 so any signal on pins 1,2 would never leave the connector, so there would be no way for it to be able to set up a link and pass data.I hope this info helps.

I have a BSNL internet connection (RJ11) so how can I use it on my new TP Link wifi router which has RJ45 cable port?

The previous answer has already answered your question. I would like to explain things here.Rj11 and rj45 are different in lot of properties. As said Rj11 is nothing but your telephone line cable. This interface uses telephone line's unused bandwidth for transmission of data alongside voice. But here we have to remember one thing that just like your telephone voice transmission, data transmission over this is analog, i.e. the graph that you get is a wave form with every possible value from 0–1. This network interface is commonly known as DSL.Now, as we know computers, or for that matter any electronic, computes and understands only binary, 0 and 1,and nothing in between. Its either everything or nothing. So what a rj11 modem router does is it first converts analog signal to a digital one, the modem function. Then the router takes this digital signal and transmits this in the environment for the electronics to catch it.On the contrary, a signal coming through rj45 is already in binary, digital form, and it is not needed to be change into anything. Therefore, such routers only have routing capabilities and not that of modem and hence do not take rj11 as input.My suggestion, if you want to use your tp link router get a dsl modem and connect it to your tp link via ethernet.Hope now you have some clarity over both types of networking interface.Thanks.

Soldering an Ethernet cable?

Drill a bigger hole? Find a friend who has tools? Just a couple suggestions.

Cat5 specifications don't allow for the pairs to be untwisted for more than one inch. Of course, people are getting data to move outside of the specs, but that's the guideline. Definitely let us know if you try this.

How can I send the whole cable TV signal over ethernet? Is there this magical devices than converts the signal to be sent over an IP network? Can I buy it on B&H or some other place like that?

Cable TV is about 1-3 GHz in spectrum and you need about 10-12 bits to reasonably represent it, that means to transfer the Cable TV signal around you need 10-36Gbit/sec. Okay so that reasonably rules out direct conversion.It is possible to convert RF to fibre optics, I have bought several units for satellite TV over the years and they work excellently.But for Cable you have the question of encrypted content, and the only solution (in the USA) is CableCARD. That makes the SiliconDust HDHomeRun Prime is your best bet.

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