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The Shielded RJ45 Cat6A Cat7 Pass Through connectors come in a 30-pack, allowing you to create custom-length Ethernet cables effortlessly. Designed for compatibility with various cable types, these connectors feature a pass-thru design for easy wire verification, 3-prong gold-plated contacts for enhanced performance, and metal housing to suppress EMI and crosstalk. Fully compliant with ROHS, UL, and FCC standards, they are perfect for both beginners and professionals in data networking.
J**L
I don't know what everyone is going on about. These work perfectly.
I don't know what everyone is going on about. These work perfectly. I'm using THICK STP (shielded twisted pair) 23awg Cat 6a cable with these. They work great. You HAVE to know what you're doing though. You need to match up the zig-zag pattern of the guide with the connector. You HAVE to use some pliers to gently squish the end of your cable (where the shroud starts) down before you can feed it into the connector. If you need to make a cable/connector and you have a thicker cable, these are perfect. I'm even using the cheaper Chinese made pass-thru crimper to crimp these, and every single one I've made (I've made 13 cables so far, so used almost the entire container of connectors) have passed and worked great.I'm crimping with this:https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B08LH1JY2F?psc=1&ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_product_detailsAnd using these for boots:https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B01D3E42DA?psc=1&ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_product_detailsAnd am wiring using STP 23AWG CAT 6a.
A**S
Great price, great quality
I used the connectors on 24awg shielded stranded cat6 cable. Took a few tries to get the hang of the pass through, but once I did it was pretty easy to repeat. I used a Klein Tools data cable tester after making each cable. The tester wasn’t certifying the cables as ‘shielded’. By accident I realized it’s because was I cutting the strain wires too short. It needed to be folded back and long enough to touch the metal shield on the inside of the connector. I made the change and they started showing as shielded on the tester each time. I’ve seen people use copper tape but it wasn’t needed on these.Been several months now. All cables work well and the price was hard to beat for this quantity. It’s a small thing, but I also like the small container they came in too.
I**A
They are not very easy to use
They are not very easy to use, especially with the fine cat7 type cable, with very soft filaments, however, they are the best solution available, they were the only ones with which we could crimp this type of cable.
L**P
don't buy
they did not fit correctly in all of my devices. too lomg--e=wold not lock in--no snap.also if you pass the wire through-- seems nice- but they have to cut off and that makes it even worse as the endshave small wire sticking out--cannot cut it off clean to the plaxtic.
P**Y
Pass-through is king...
Passthrough connectors are the only way to go in my opnion. I always trim an extra 5mm so I can pull the line far enough through to easly check the pairs before crimping. Never get a misswire.
D**T
Not Great
I wanted to like these very much because they are very well built. Love the shielding and the cable support. The connectors are solid. The problem lays with the guide and the crimp prongs themselves. The guide slots are too loose, so when you try to push the wires through the upper and lower level holes, the guide gets pushed back as it's being pushed into the connector. It took many multiple attempts to make a positive connection on both sides of the cat7 to make one good cable. I ended up giving up using these in favor of some older style RJ45 connectors I had, with zero failures after.If the tolerances are tightened up a bit this could be really good. Until then, maybe hold off.
D**E
As described. Worked great
Fell in heavy like with pass-through connectors a few years back. These foot the bill where fit form and function are concerned
A**N
As good as it gets, I guess
They are a pain to work with, but they do work, while field termination connectors are just too bulky in 90% of the cases. I guess that's what you have to deal with when running CAT6A (and beyond).Also don't be misguided by the picture and video, if running CAT6A S/FTP or CAT7 the neck goes around the shielding, not the insulation!
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 weeks ago