The punch down tool came today, so I went and had a look the the two ports in my room and they look the same...
What do you all think??
Edit: I came across this online, you think I should change it to B..and would that mean I`d have to do the whole house in B?
As a general rule, T568A and T568B should not be combined or interchanged. Keeping in mind that T568B is the preferred format for new networks in the United States, you're (technically) free to choose either wiring scheme for cases in which a new network is being built from the ground up.
Don't mix T568A & T568B in a single house. Stay with what you have. No need to change.
Make sure the all the wires inside the cable are solid cores, not stranded. If the wires in the wall/at the panel are stranded, when you punch down the wires, they will be cut.
Pull the wires out, cut the punch-down sections and re-punch them for the wall jacks that don't work.
Agreed don't change the pattern. We already know the patch panels are 568A, so use that on the drop side.
I'm already not a big fan of those wall jacks, lol. The biggest thing to note is on the "not working" jack is how much extra cable there is. Definitely repunch that one. What ever tool was used before was probably dull, sub-par, or just not done well.. The cuts on the end of the cables don't look clean at all. And there's WAY too much excess cable on both ends of those drops.
For the record, I prefer this kind:
https://www.computercablestore.com/how-to-terminate-punch-down-style-keystone-jacks
If repunching doesn't correct the issue, back to the patch panel to investigate the drop in the same way
@Mloc33 - take your time and do it right. In terms of solid or stranded cables:
Solid cable is also called "riser", it's printed on the cable jacket, and you ONLY punch these into panels or keystones
Stranded cable is also called "patch", it's also printed on the cable jacket, and you ONLY crimp these into RJ45 heads
If you punch down stranded cable, you will have problems down the road, same if you crimp solid cable