T568a vs T568b: Which To Use
Written by Don Schultz, trueCABLE Senior Technical Advisor, Fluke Networks Copper/Fiber CCTT, BICSI INST1, INSTC, INSTF Certified
Sometimes choosing between two technically different options, especially if you are a novice, is a tough decision. Which way do you go, and how do you find out? Well, you came to the right blog and video! When terminating the end(s) of Ethernet cable, you have to follow a certain color code scheme, T568A or T568B. This scheme is designed to help the installer get the conductor wires into the right order so that your cable will work properly. Get this part wrong, and you may end up with a non-working cable run. Whether it be an 8P8C RJ45 plug, keystone jack, or patch panel this holds true regardless of what kind of termination you are performing. And it does not matter if it is Cat5e, Cat6, Cat6A, or Cat8.
Confusion and Controversy
There are two schemes: T568A and T568B. From a practical standpoint, they perform and function identically in a modern data network. Just be sure you are using the same color scheme at both ends of your cable and you will stay out of trouble. I happen to prefer “B”. Why? I got lazy and did not want to memorize “A”. Fifteen years ago I might have given you a different answer, but things change.
T568A and T568B are the termination standards used by Internet backbone infrastructure, Internet providers and all the way down to homeowners or businesses. The only real difference between these two pin-to-pair assignments are the green and orange pairs. These two sets are swapped in the cable. Even though these are switched, they are still both effectively direct or “straight through” connections.
There is misinformation out there on this topic, fortunately most of it benign. This misinformation is not malicious, but sometimes people get used to doing something a certain way and then it becomes “gospel”. The culprit is often out of date information.
There are rare instances (like US government contractual requirements) when T568A may be specifically called out for use. Unless you have a customer dictating which one to use, then T568A versus T568B comes down to personal preference. If you don’t have any specific requirements to use one over the other, then simply pick one and stick with it. You don’t need to research any further.
The color code schemes are defined by the ANSI Accredited Telecommunications Industry Association (ANSI/TIA). In the absence of a stated customer requirement, the 2018 dated ANSI/TIA 568.2-D revision sets the commercial building standard for how to match twisted pair wires to a plug or socket. ANSI/TIA 570-D sets the residential standard. However, the standards have changed over time and this takes some by surprise, leading to confusion and misinformation. It also leads to lively debates!
As of 2018, ANSI/TIA still recommends T568A for residential installations for plug-in backward compatibility with old technology like fax machines or a plug-in base station for wireless phone handsets. If you are not using any such devices, or have no intention of plugging ancient RJ11 plugs into RJ45 wall jacks like you would a “phone jack”, then it comes back to personal preference again. In reality, just how many people are using this old equipment any longer? I personally switched over to cell phones in 2006 and have not looked back.
In the past, specifically with the old TIA/EIA 568-B-2 revision written and ratified around 2001, this recommendation was different for commercial and US government spaces. TIA recommended T568A at that time and further notated US government contracts require T568A. This was to maintain backward compatibility with older equipment like in the residential space (fax machines, etc.) As of the “D” revision, this is no longer the case and that recommendation and notation have been removed. The ANSI/TIA 568.2-D commercial standard is now mute on the subject unless you have a contractual or technical reason to go with one or the other. There is a warning in the commercial standard about making certain that both ends of the cable are terminated to the same scheme. In other words, pick one and stick with it.
So now that we have sorted out what the actual recommendations are, another common misconception is that one wiring scheme will perform better than the other. Let me put this to bed immediately: they are identical in regards to performance. I decided to conduct a test to prove this out.
Test conditions, components, and setup:
- 292 feet of trueCABLE Cat6A Riser U/UTP Ethernet cable
- Two trueCABLE Cat6 unshielded tool-less keystone jacks (these are component rated and impedance matching grade keystones)
- Fluke DSX-8000, in calibration, 6.5 B5 firmware, using the permanent link adapters
- A reference was set after a 10-minute warm-up of the Fluke DSX-8000
- The first test conducted was with the keystone jacks terminated to the T568B pattern
- The second test conducted was with the keystone jacks terminated to the T568A pattern
- The same ends of the cable were used at the remote and main units for both tests
- The same keystones used at the remote and main units were used on the same ends as well
- The ambient temperature was 71 degrees Fahrenheit
- The Cat6A cable was loosely coiled in three-foot coils, not actually installed
The results of the tests speak for themselves. It is a wash on performance.
T568A test
T568B test
Summarized results
Crossover Cable
So, if there is a “straight through” kind of cable run there must be a “not” straight through type (logically speaking), correct? Well, indeed there is. It is called a “cross over” cable where one end is terminated to T568A and the other is terminated to T568B. Where would one use that kind of thing?
Images credit: Industrial Ethernet Book
In most network applications, the standard straight through cabling method is required. For example, a computer plugged into a wall panel uses the standard cable configured with either T568A or T568B termination. This allows the computer to communicate with other devices on the local area network. Whether talking to a network printer or mail server, the data traverses the network because all the cabling has been put together using one of the above termination standards. The same is true for the cabling in the wall and the patch panel where they all terminate.
Now for other applications, we may need to connect a computer directly to another computer or a host-to-host connection. As an example, we need to copy data from one computer to another, but the two computers don’t have access to a switch for help with this process. These two computers need to use a crossover cable.
Please note that the use of cross-over cables is very rare in the modern age. There are some specialized applications for them, but you will likely never see it in the wild.
Summing this up, the whole T568A vs T568B thing has been a needless source of confusion and controversy for over two decades. Understanding how the standards evolved and your chances of encountering a situation where you will be forced into using one scheme or the other is not likely to happen in this day and age. Just pick one and go. With that, I say…
HAPPY NETWORKING!
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Hello Jim! Great question. If you decided to create your own pinout you would end up with a cable that is no longer in electromagnetic balance and thus a non-working cable. Long story short, don’t do it! Definitely stick with either T568A or T568B. Hope this helps. Please let us know if you have any further questions!
If my ISP drop terminates with a keyjack that I can see is T568B, does that mean that all cabling from that point on should be T568B as well? Also, are all modern network ethernet devices (switches, routers, APs, etc) happy to accept either A or B?
Hello Jamie! Good question. I personally use T568B for any install I do, and have not come across a situation where T568A was required. As long as both ends of any discrete (termination to termination) cable run are wired using the same scheme, then the run is “straight through” and both schemes function identically. Your switches and other powered devices do not care whether which scheme you use as long as both ends of ANY ONE cable run are wired to the same scheme. In short, just pick one scheme and stick to it and you will never get yourself into trouble!
"B" is the accepted standard so it is the one and only one I have ever made a cable for. This reminds me of the Beta verses VHS battle as well as the DVD R + & – battle and finally a claim for a winner yet it seems that the cable industry can't come to a final resting place. Please let's barry the hatchet, agree that "B" is the winner for some reason and move on just like VHS did and DVD R did. What I do know is that "B"is what I use and continue to use and as long as my one end matches my other end it doesn't really matter but it would be nice to settle on something for complicity sake. If you wire anything other than "B" I sure hope I don't come across your cables so I don't have to waste my time ripping them out and starting over from scratch.