<p>I used a Fluke DTX to certify a few cable drops at work last summer. Even though one computer will like a cable at a certain speed, the DTX gave thorough detail into the physical capabilities of the wire in far more detail than I had ever thought would have ever mattered. I felt like it really helped me to understand the "personality" some things seem to have, which could all be down to a kink in one of the wires, or a poor termination at the jack. It's pretty amazing to me.</p>
<div class="gmail_quote">On May 4, 2013 3:58 PM, "Scott Packard" <<a href="mailto:spackard@gmail.com">spackard@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br type="attribution"><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">
<div dir="ltr"><div><div><div><div>Had an interesting issue at work with a CAT6 CMR Ethernet cable. It was an old cable, CAT6, good quality, field-terminated, about 30 feet, running directly to a Cisco gig-E switch. An old cable with a new PC. It had been working fine with the old Sun host, until it was retired. The PC had I/O issues with it, though a few PC sysadmins had just complained that something was wrong somewhere, but didn't know where.<br>
<br></div>(I was using the VMWare's VIC on the PC to deploy an OVF template to a Fibre-Channel multipathed SAN, so a lot of layers to maybe have problems.)<br></div>I figured/looked at some performance graphs in VMWare and thought the Ethernet I/O should be higher than 3KB/sec, traced the cable back to the switch and the LED on the switch was quickly flashing from green to yellow and back. I replaced the cable with a new one and that fixed the problem.<br>
<br></div>I wrapped up the old one and brought it home to test it was a DC-based tester (a Testifier by Test-Um) and all 8 wires pass. So, I guess sometimes a DC-based tester won't tell you everything, or, this CMR cable is stiffer than your typical patch cable and it's just slightly possible that it may have worked its way loose a little and if I had tried just remating it to the PC it may have fixed it. However, it worked well enough so the PC could authenticate to a domain controller, synchronize time to an NTP master, and look at a few web-based management sites (ESXi servers). It just couldn't carry a lot of traffic.<br>
<br></div>Regards, Scott<br></div>
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