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Clearcom question


Cheeseweasel

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Hello,

 

Currently attempting to get a new Clearcom Freespeak basestation (wireless system) talking to a Helix (wired system) over the 4-wire connection. The manual (here) on p.93 says to connect the two using a '4W crossover cable'. Looking at the pinouts given on that page, the cable is neither a standard ethernet cable nor a crossover cable. Can anyone please tell me what I actually need?

 

Thanks

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Ah, another case of a really good design process. Been there and done it more times than I care to remember!

 

Manager: "Here's a good connector to use. It's got eight pins."

Engineer: "Oh yes, I'll talk to the designer of the other end and we'll come to an agreement over which pins to use."

Manager: "No, you are not allowed to communicate with them as they are in another department and I am king here. I am totally non-technical so I'll just pick some numbers."

Engineer: "Right you are."

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Just looks like a documentation error rather than a design problem.

 

It would be nice to think that but, even with the documentation as pointed to by Cheeseweasel, it's still not possible to use either off-the-shelf Type A or Type B RJ45 patch cords and requires something homemade!

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It would be nice to think that but, even with the documentation as pointed to by Cheeseweasel, it's still not possible to use either off-the-shelf Type A or Type B RJ45 patch cords and requires something homemade!

 

Isn't it just a normal crossover cable?

 

linky

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It would be nice to think that but, even with the documentation as pointed to by Cheeseweasel, it's still not possible to use either off-the-shelf Type A or Type B RJ45 patch cords and requires something homemade!

 

Isn't it just a normal crossover cable?

 

linky

 

Nope. A standard Type B crossover cable looks like this:

 

http://www.warehousecables.com/prodphotos/568B-crossover-diagram.jpg

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Yep, it's just unfortunate they decided to use the term 'crossover cable' in their documentation, as to many people familiar with IT it has a very specific meaning.

 

To be fair the tech support guy was very good - he didn't know the answer straight away but phoned me back ten minutes later once he'd looked it up, and gave me the link to that diagram.

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