Crossover cable

A crossover cable connects two devices of the same type, for example DTE-DTE or DCE-DCE, usually connected asymmetrically (DTE-DCE), by a modified cable called a crosslink.[1] Such distinction of devices was introduced by IBM.

The crossing wires in a cable or in a connector adaptor allows:

Examples

Other technologies

Some connection standards use different balanced pairs to transmit data, so crossover cables for them have different configurations to swap the transmit and receive pairs:

Two pairs crossed, two pairs uncrossed
T1 crossover
Pin Connection 1: T568A
Connection 2: T568B
Pins on plug face
pair color pair color
1 2
white/orange stripe
1
blue solid
2 2
orange solid
1
white/blue stripe
3 3
white/green stripe
3
white/green stripe
4 1
blue solid
2
white/orange stripe
5 1
white/blue stripe
2
orange solid
6 3
green solid
3
green solid
7 4
white/brown stripe
4
white/brown stripe
8 4
brown solid
4
brown solid

See also

References

  1. Dean, Tamara (2010). Network+ Guide to Networks. Delmar. p. 657.
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