F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks Two computers connected by a single Cat 5e Ethernet cable.

Two computers connected by a single Cat 5e Ethernet cable.

Two computers connected by a single Cat 5e Ethernet cable.

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_ErikThePanda_
Posting Freak
807
11-28-2016, 06:15 PM
#1
I attempted to move roughly 40 GB of video from my laptop with a GbE LAN port to a PC also equipped with a GbE port using Windows 10’s built-in file sharing. Despite setting each device to negotiate a 1.0 Gbps connection in the Speed & Duplex settings, the connections didn’t establish. Previously, Mr. Linus managed a similar task at 10 Gbps, suggesting hardware limitations might be involved. My PC likely has an Intel Pentium G4560 and my laptop an Intel Core-i5 6300 HQ. Assistance needed!
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_ErikThePanda_
11-28-2016, 06:15 PM #1

I attempted to move roughly 40 GB of video from my laptop with a GbE LAN port to a PC also equipped with a GbE port using Windows 10’s built-in file sharing. Despite setting each device to negotiate a 1.0 Gbps connection in the Speed & Duplex settings, the connections didn’t establish. Previously, Mr. Linus managed a similar task at 10 Gbps, suggesting hardware limitations might be involved. My PC likely has an Intel Pentium G4560 and my laptop an Intel Core-i5 6300 HQ. Assistance needed!

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ZelowS
Member
206
11-29-2016, 02:46 AM
#2
Both devices support gigabit network cards. Adjusting auto-negotiation to enforce 1Gbps full-duplex will affect performance. Assign IP addresses such as Machine 1: 192.168.1.10 and Machine 2: 192.168.1.11 using a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0. No gateway or DNS is required, just connect via the shared IP.
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ZelowS
11-29-2016, 02:46 AM #2

Both devices support gigabit network cards. Adjusting auto-negotiation to enforce 1Gbps full-duplex will affect performance. Assign IP addresses such as Machine 1: 192.168.1.10 and Machine 2: 192.168.1.11 using a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0. No gateway or DNS is required, just connect via the shared IP.

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Xanturvan
Member
161
12-01-2016, 02:50 AM
#3
The cable type must be a crossover unless your network interfaces support autosensing since the interface isn’t displaying a connection. For a crossover (x-over) cable, you can connect two devices with one cable. A straight-through cable (standard cat5e setup) won’t work. Get a crossover cable and manually assign IP addresses on the link.
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Xanturvan
12-01-2016, 02:50 AM #3

The cable type must be a crossover unless your network interfaces support autosensing since the interface isn’t displaying a connection. For a crossover (x-over) cable, you can connect two devices with one cable. A straight-through cable (standard cat5e setup) won’t work. Get a crossover cable and manually assign IP addresses on the link.

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FozMac
Member
97
12-01-2016, 11:38 AM
#4
They should have this by now. unless they are over 15 years old. It's possible the cable might be damaged though.
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FozMac
12-01-2016, 11:38 AM #4

They should have this by now. unless they are over 15 years old. It's possible the cable might be damaged though.

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donibaum
Junior Member
5
12-05-2016, 12:40 AM
#5
It seems many new Atheros and RealTek models lack the 'functional' auto sensing feature.
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donibaum
12-05-2016, 12:40 AM #5

It seems many new Atheros and RealTek models lack the 'functional' auto sensing feature.

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jambalaia93
Member
224
12-05-2016, 04:07 PM
#6
Btw isn't this BASE100-T crossover? You want to have BASE1000-T Crossover right? That should be like this:
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jambalaia93
12-05-2016, 04:07 PM #6

Btw isn't this BASE100-T crossover? You want to have BASE1000-T Crossover right? That should be like this:

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Qandii
Member
233
12-05-2016, 06:08 PM
#7
It looks like OP might not be experiencing a crossover problem. I suspect the issue could be with the cable quality or connection. Try resetting the card settings to defaults and test with a different cable. For a quick fix, you can purchase an HDD adapter and connect it via USB—it’s a handy option. Here’s a useful link: http://a.co/cnZkQsj
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Qandii
12-05-2016, 06:08 PM #7

It looks like OP might not be experiencing a crossover problem. I suspect the issue could be with the cable quality or connection. Try resetting the card settings to defaults and test with a different cable. For a quick fix, you can purchase an HDD adapter and connect it via USB—it’s a handy option. Here’s a useful link: http://a.co/cnZkQsj

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warmtheguy
Member
71
12-12-2016, 09:24 PM
#8
Yea, my bad that is 100M I posted, cheers for the correction. Been awhile since I had to crimp any x-over cabling.
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warmtheguy
12-12-2016, 09:24 PM #8

Yea, my bad that is 100M I posted, cheers for the correction. Been awhile since I had to crimp any x-over cabling.

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Jerryx01
Posting Freak
870
12-29-2016, 11:14 PM
#9
The pin configuration matches a gigabit crossover cable, but the labeling on the sides that says one is 568A and the other is 568B is inaccurate. A cable that is truly 568A on one side and 568B on the other simply exchanges the green and orange connectors while keeping blue and brown as straight-through. This creates a cable that works as a 100Mb crossover, yet it will not connect properly at gigabit speeds even with Auto-MDIX enabled on both ends.
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Jerryx01
12-29-2016, 11:14 PM #9

The pin configuration matches a gigabit crossover cable, but the labeling on the sides that says one is 568A and the other is 568B is inaccurate. A cable that is truly 568A on one side and 568B on the other simply exchanges the green and orange connectors while keeping blue and brown as straight-through. This creates a cable that works as a 100Mb crossover, yet it will not connect properly at gigabit speeds even with Auto-MDIX enabled on both ends.

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heroboy17
Senior Member
528
12-30-2016, 05:44 AM
#10
No, only one side requires autosensing to function properly.
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heroboy17
12-30-2016, 05:44 AM #10

No, only one side requires autosensing to function properly.