Same answer YES [same colour for one of the conductors of all pairs]
Fair enough - as I said, I've never seen that. Other than 'manufacturing convenience', is there any reason why they'd do that with a cable that only had one 'set' of (3 or 4) pairs?Same answer YES [same colour for one of the conductors of all pairs]
Yes'manufacturing convenience',
Can't find the actual official text ... the 2nd of the pair having a stripe.
For cables with tightly twisted-pairs [all pairs less than 38 mm (1.5 in) per twist] the mate conductor may serve as the marking for the white conductor.
has chopped a 20 core (with plain colours) with barely a couple of inches sticking
About 5 years ago, some 'work' (I don't know what, or whether it was due to trauma) on the telephone cable or cabinets in our village resulted in most houses in the village being connected to the wrong line for a few days until the mess was sorted out.or the BMW driver has taken out a street cabinet with over a 100 pairs sheared off almost at ground level.......
I would have thought they'd pull out the cable and replace it in a situation like that - otherwise they'd have an awkward bunch of splices in the bottom of the cabinet.or the BMW driver has taken out a street cabinet with over a 100 pairs sheared off almost at ground level.......
they'd pull out the cable and replace it in a situation like that
IHNIBAS, I assume that's a photo in a largish telephone exchange with what looks like a good few thousand blue/white or blue/yellow pairs ?
I'm not sure in what sense that is meant to be an example of "most disastrous cable messes". What else do they think one can/should do with a very large number of cables? ... and, as for "mess", they clearly haven't lived
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