I ran Cat5e throughout my house and I wasn't ready to install my patch panel because I want to cut a section out of the drywall and install a half inch plywood in the cutout section so that it will sit flush with the drywall and I can mount my network equipment to that. Since I wasn't ready, I still wanted to try one cable for my desktop computer. I have used Cat5e solid cable for all the runs and used the T568B standard for everything. I installed a keystone jack near my desktop and punched down the wires.In the basement, since my patch panel wasn't ready, I put an RJ45 8P8C plug on the solid cable and plugged it in to the back of my ISP modem/router. Since I have fiber to the home, the fiber optic cable comes in near the electrical panel and connects to an Optical Network Terminal(ONT) and from there I ran a Cat 5e cable to feed the WAN port of my ISP modem/router. On this cable I put an RJ45 8P8C connector on both ends. Once everything was connected I check my desktop PC and it said that I was connected at 1Gbps. My ISP bandwidth that I am paying for is 940Mbps/Down-100Mbps/Up. I ran a speedtest from my desktop and the maximum I could get was 88Mbps. I then ran the speedtest on my 5Ghz Wifi device because I know before I could get 275-300Mbps speed on wifi and I only got 88Mbps. So I figured something was wrong. I took the modem and moved it back beside the ONT and used a Cat 6 patch cable to connect the WAN port of the modem/router to the ONT and turned it on. I then ran another speed test on 5Ghz WiFi and got a result of 275-300Mbps. I then connected the Cat5e cable that was running from the Ont to the Lan closet into the back of the modem/router and at the lan closet I used an RJ45 coupler and connected that cable to the cable that is going to my desktop PC and then checked the link speed and it said 100 Mbps.
Would this be a problem with the Cat5e wiring or I would need to run Cat 6 cable instead? I thought Cat 5e was sufficient for gigabit so I used that. Could it be because I put rj45 8P8C connectors on solid cable while it's meant to be punched down? I also followed this guide to punch down the keystone jack:
http://www.cableorganizer.com/learning-center/how-to/how-to-wire-keystone-jack.htm
But then I noticed on this site, it shows to keep the pairs twisted and just separate them enough to be able to fit them into the keystone jack while still twisted up to that point, could that be it, too much untwisted wire?
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-afmKVonIBT0/TjwppRoJCGI/AAAAAAAAA8g/0GAXP4i-sIc/s1600/Wired+Cat6A+Jack.png
I am not sure where to start or if I need to buy Cat 6 and run that instead.
Would this be a problem with the Cat5e wiring or I would need to run Cat 6 cable instead? I thought Cat 5e was sufficient for gigabit so I used that. Could it be because I put rj45 8P8C connectors on solid cable while it's meant to be punched down? I also followed this guide to punch down the keystone jack:
http://www.cableorganizer.com/learning-center/how-to/how-to-wire-keystone-jack.htm
But then I noticed on this site, it shows to keep the pairs twisted and just separate them enough to be able to fit them into the keystone jack while still twisted up to that point, could that be it, too much untwisted wire?
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-afmKVonIBT0/TjwppRoJCGI/AAAAAAAAA8g/0GAXP4i-sIc/s1600/Wired+Cat6A+Jack.png
I am not sure where to start or if I need to buy Cat 6 and run that instead.
