No what you linked to does NOT do the same.
Have a merry Christmas Day Mottie.![]()
Merry Christmas to you too, mattylad.
No what you linked to does NOT do the same.
Have a merry Christmas Day Mottie.![]()
Hah hah yes. we had a job some 25+ years back where a rack had been removed and the cables reterminated in another rack. No idea what skills the guy had but he had managed to terminate them incorrectly - the lights flashed in sequence but out of step with each other. The kit we patched to it simply didn't work and of course patching back so the 2 halves of the tester were side by side the flip was cancelled out. It took some head scratching until I used a tone tracer to prove a cable one pair at a time.I have one of those too, they check continuity, that there are no crossed connections, or shorts, work quite well, but you need to make sure the light sequence is the same, at both ends.
Hah hah yes. we had a job some 25+ years back where a rack had been removed and the cables reterminated in another rack. No idea what skills the guy had but he had managed to terminate them incorrectly - the lights flashed in sequence but out of step with each other. The kit we patched to it simply didn't work and of course patching back so the 2 halves of the tester were side by side the flip was cancelled out. It took some head scratching until I used a tone tracer to prove a cable one pair at a time.
Lights out of sequence (e.g. 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8 on one side and 1-2-4-3-5-6-7-8 on the other) means swapped wires.
When they are a great didstance apart and it ranLights out of sequence (e.g. 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8 on one side and 1-2-4-3-5-6-7-8 on the other) means swapped wires.
Years ago I made a manual version to test leads, basically a box divided down the middle as send and receive sides with 10 LEDs side by side and a rotary switch to light each in turn on one half. I fitted pretty much every type of socket up to 9pin + enclosure used in AV work at the time except 8P8C and speakon but soon made a few adaptor cables.Two or more lights on at the same time means two wires shorted together, missing light is wire open (not at all).
When they are a great didstance apart and it ran
1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8 on one side and
5-6-7-8-1-2-3-4 on the other
how many would instantly question it?
But is the gap for 9 really that obvious when it happens?That's fairly obvious because there is a pause when it wraps around from 8 to 1.
But is the gap for 9 really that obvious when it happens?
I see the tester in the earlier pic and believe I identify it as 'one I've handled' and seriousely don't recall it as a count of 10 by the perceived gap, only to 9, however this wasn't recent but initially the error went unoticed.Yes - It's a ten output counter type chip, so between 8 and 1 there is a double count gap.
Just like your wafer switches, except automated switching.
The experience being we had some sockets in a system incorrectly wired - shades of the colours was blamed - but in reality I believe we established is was different punchdown layout of different manufacturers sockets (probably posher socket faceplates in the bosses offices).The only reason I ask the question is as always the experience.
I see the tester in the earlier pic and believe I identify it as 'one I've handled' and seriousely don't recall it as a count of 10 by the perceived gap, only to 9, however this wasn't recent but initially the error went unoticed.
I'm sure there are numerous variations by now anyway.Maybe 9 then, mine is tucked away in the loft.
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