onto a cable The
8 position 8 contact (
8P8C) connector is a modular connector commonly used to terminate
twisted pair and multi-conductor
flat cable. These connectors are commonly used for
Ethernet over twisted pair, registered jacks and other telephone applications,
RS-232 serial communication using the
ANSI/TIA-568 (formerly TIA/EIA-568) and
Yost standards, and other applications involving
unshielded twisted pair,
shielded twisted pair, and multi-conductor flat cable. An 8P8C modular connection consists of a male plug and a female jack, each with eight equally spaced contacts. On the plug, the contacts are flat metal bars positioned parallel to the connector body. Inside the jack, the contacts are metal spring wires angled away from the insertion interface. When the plug is mated with the jack, the contacts meet and create an electrical connection. The spring force of the jack contacts ensures a good interface. Although commonly referred to as
RJ45 in the context of Ethernet and
structured cabling,
RJ45 originally referred to a specific wiring configuration of an 8P8C female connector. The original telephone-system-standard RJ45 plug has a key that excludes insertion in an un-keyed 8P8C socket. The original RJ45S was intended for high-speed modems and is obsolete. The RJ45S jack mates with a keyed 8P2C modular plug, and has pins 4 and 5 (the middle positions) wired for the ring and tip conductors of a single telephone line and pins 7 and 8 shorting a programming resistor. This is a different mechanical interface and wiring scheme than ANSI/TIA-568 T568A and T568B schemes with the 8P8C connector in Ethernet and telephone applications. Generic 8P8C modular connectors are similar to those used for the RJ45S variant, although the RJ45S plug is keyed and not compatible with non-keyed 8P8C modular jacks. Telephone installers who wired RJ45S modem jacks or RJ61X telephone jacks were familiar with the pin assignments of the standard. However, the standard unkeyed modular connectors became ubiquitous for computer networking and informally inherited the name
RJ45.
Standardization The shape and dimensions of an 8P8C modular connector are specified for US telephone applications by the Administrative Council for Terminal Attachment (ACTA) in national standard
ANSI/TIA-1096-A and international standard ISO-8877. This standard does not use the short term 8P8C and covers more than just 8P8C modular connectors, but the 8P8C modular connector type is the eight-position connector type described therein, with eight contacts installed. For
data communication applications (
LAN,
structured cabling), International Standard
IEC 60603 specifies in parts 7-1, 7-2, 7-4, 7-5, and 7-7 not only the same physical dimensions but also high-frequency performance requirements for shielded and unshielded versions of this connector for carrying frequencies up to 100, 250 and 600
MHz.
Pinout 8P8C connectors are frequently terminated using the T568A or T568B assignments that are defined in ANSI/TIA-568. The drawings to the right show that the copper connections and pairing are the same; the only difference is that the orange and green pairs (colors) are swapped. A cable wired as T568A at one end and wired as T568B at the other end (Tx and Rx pairs reversed) is an
Ethernet crossover cable. Before the widespread acceptance of
auto MDI-X capabilities, a crossover cable was needed to interconnect similar network equipment (such as
Ethernet hubs to Ethernet hubs). Crossover cables are sometimes still used to connect two computers together without a switch or hub; however, most network interface cards (NIC) in use today implement auto MDI-X to automatically configure themselves based on the type of cable plugged into them. A cable wired the same at both ends is called a
patch or straight-through cable, because no pin/pair assignments are swapped. If a
patch or
straight cable is used to connect two computers with auto-MDI-X capable NICs, one NIC will configure itself to swap the functions of its Tx and Rx wire pairs.
Types and compatibility Two types of 8P8C plugs and
crimping tools for installing the plug onto a cable are commonly available: Western Electric/Stewart Stamping (WE/SS) and Tyco/AMP. While the two types are similar, the tooling and plug types cannot be interchanged. WE/SS compatible plugs are available from a large number of manufacturers, whereas Tyco/AMP plugs are produced exclusively by
Tyco Electronics. Both types of modular plugs can be mated with a standard 8P8C modular jack. Both types of 8P8C plugs are available in shielded and unshielded varieties for different
attenuation tolerances as needed. Shielded plugs are more expensive and require shielded cable, but have a lower attenuation, and may reduce
electromagnetic interference. Although a narrower 4-pin and 6-pin plug fits into the wider 8-pin jack and makes a connection with the available contacts on the plug, because the body of the smaller connector may stress the remaining contacts, the smaller connector can potentially damage the springs of the larger jack.
Applications 8P8C connectors are commonly used in computer networking applications, where interconnecting cables are terminated at each end with an 8P8C modular plug wired according to TIA/EIA standards. Most wired Ethernet communications are carried over Category 5e or Category 6 cable terminated with 8P8C modular plugs. The connector is also used in other telecommunications connections, including ISDN and
T1. Where building network and telephone wiring is pre-installed, the center (blue) pair is often used to carry
telephony signals. While this allows an RJ11 plug to connect, it may damage the modular jack; an approved converter prevents damage. In landline telephony, an 8P8C jack is used at the point a line enters the building to allow the line to be broken to insert automatic dialing equipment, including
intrusion alarm panels. The
EIA/TIA-561 standard describes the use of 8P8C connectors for RS-232 serial interfaces. This application is common as a console interface for
network equipment, such as
switches,
routers, and
headless computers. 8P8C modular connectors are also commonly used as a microphone connector for
PMR,
LMR, and
amateur radio transceivers. Frequently, the pinout is different, usually mirrored (i.e. what would be pins 1 to 8 in the ANSI/TIA-568 standard might be pins 8 to 1 in the radio and its manual). In analog mobile telephony, the 8P8C connector was used to connect an
AMPS cellular handset to its (separate) base unit; this usage is now obsolete. The physical connector is standardized as the IEC 60603-7 8P8C modular connector with different
categories of performance. The physical dimensions of the male and female connectors are specified in ANSI/TIA-1096-A and ISO-8877 standards and normally wired to the T568A and T568B pinouts specified in the ANSI/TIA-568 standard to be compatible with both telephone and Ethernet. A similar standard jack once used for modem and data connections, the RJ45S, used a
keyed variety of the 8P8C body with an extra tab that prevents it from mating with other connectors; the visual difference compared to the more common 8P8C is subtle, but it is a different connector. The original RJ45S keyed 8P2C modular connector, obsolete today, had pins 5 and 4 wired for tip and ring of a single telephone line and pins 7 and 8 shorting a programming resistor. Electronics catalogs commonly advertise 8P8C modular connectors as
RJ45. An installer can wire the jack to any pin-out or use it as part of a generic
structured cabling system such as ISO/IEC 15018 or
ISO/IEC 11801 using 8P8C patch panels for both phone and data. ==10P10C==