<< Thanks for the vote of support Mucman.
I'm really trying to drive home the importance of physical layer here. I have been building networks since 1989 and the number one reason bar none above all for poor performance or just flaky connectivity is cables. I've charged many a company many a dollar to come in and do a network analysis (full week of consulting) only to recommend "fix your cable infrastructure." From my experience (100+ network consulting jobs) at least 70 percent of their problems were physical layer related. This fact is undisputed. Just because you get a link light and can communicate does in no way shape or form means you have a good cable.
So, this thread was hopefully helpful to folks who have had intermittant connectivity problems or slow performance. Lesson learned -
IF YOU HAVE ANY KIND OF PERFORMANCE PROBLEMS OR GENERAL WEIRDNESS WITH NETWORK COMMUNICATIONS - CHECK THE PHYSICAL LAYER FIRST. NETWORKS SHOULD BE TROUBLEFREE. >>
I am sorry if you think I am attacking your expertise, I in no way meant that, and I respect your knowledge.
I just think it is wrong to assume every home-made cable is bad, and the root of all network evil.
Good day