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RTV Installation: How to Connect RJ-45 and 2-Wire RJ-11 Cables Simultaneously?

jck85 40821 9
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Treść została przetłumaczona polish » english Zobacz oryginalną wersję tematu
  • #1 9592321
    jck85
    Level 11  
    Hello,

    Simple question but I can't find the right answer anywhere.

    I'm doing an RTV installation at home and I want to connect telephone and internet cables at the same time, which I don't know much about yet.

    I have sockets:
    http://www.dipol.com.pl/gniazdo_koncowe_signal_rtv-sat_-_rj-45_-_rj-11_R694043.htm

    How to connect RJ-45 I found in the dipole guide:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MPCXwkgwz3M

    but phone cable unfortunately, I have 2 wires, so I am asking for advice, which "plugs" in the socket to plug these 2 wires (1, 2, 3, 4) ?? and how to connect these cables at the end?

    I found the polarization on the wiki (http://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/RJ-11) but unfortunately it does not explain much.
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  • #3 9592335
    matzg
    Level 35  
    Hello, the polarity is irrelevant ... you connect the wires to 2 and 3
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    #4 9592401
    tomjed
    Level 28  
    matzg wrote:
    Hello, the polarity is irrelevant ... you connect the wires to 2 and 3


    According to the drawing of the CameR 3 - 4 wheels.

    kiss
  • #5 9592467
    jck85
    Level 11  
    Approx. Thank you very much.

    That is, to the plug under 3-4. But what about the Dipole socket? Because this is where I have the biggest dilemma.
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    #6 9592511
    matzg
    Level 35  
    The signal from the telephone line in our standard is always on the middle "pins", i.e. if we have RJ-11(1,2,3,4) it is on 2 and 3 when (1,2,3,4,5,6) it is on 3 and 4.
    In the socket, also connect to the middle ones, i.e. 2 and 3.

    jck85 wrote:
    and how to connect these cables at the end?

    Clamp the RJ plug crimper but in the socket Krone type crimper
  • Helpful post
    #7 9592516
    irekr
    VIP Meritorious for electroda.pl
    The Dipole's socket is quite specific.
    In the RJ11 part, there are only two springs in the socket and four terminals on the blades. The terminals appear to be in parallel. It's a pity that there is no description for this part.
    RJ45 is a matter of course: there are only 4 wires for 10 and 100 MB networks: 1-2 and 3-6. The middle pins are not brought out, so we will not use this socket for telephone purposes.
    It's a bit unusual, Cat3 sockets have pins 1 to 6 brought out.
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    #8 9592533
    matzg
    Level 35  
    irekr wrote:
    There are only two springs in the RJ11 part...

    There are four in the photo you can see 2 in the foreground and deeper another 2.
  • Helpful post
    #9 9592586
    irekr
    VIP Meritorious for electroda.pl
    Indeed, congrats on being observant...
    It seems that the layout of this socket corresponds to the S-0 connector (e.g. for ISDN), i.e. pins 1 to 4 are filled, the middle two are connected to the analog phone.
    Too bad there isn't a better description...
  • #10 9593049
    jck85
    Level 11  
    Thank you very much to everyone for quick and reliable answers and advice.

    Now everything is clear.

    I consider the topic closed.

Topic summary

The discussion revolves around connecting RJ-45 and RJ-11 cables simultaneously for an RTV installation. Users clarify that for the RJ-11 connection, the telephone line should be connected to pins 2 and 3, as these are the standard for telephone signals. The specific Dipole socket in question has a unique configuration where the RJ-11 part only utilizes two springs and four terminals, with the middle pins being used for the telephone connection. The RJ-45 connection follows standard wiring practices, utilizing pins 1-2 and 3-6 for network connections. The conversation concludes with users expressing satisfaction with the clarity of the provided information.
Summary generated by the language model.
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