A Punch Down Tool
Cable tester
The specialized tool for this is usually called a "crimper" or "crimping tool". A knife or cable stripper may also be helpful to remove the outer jacket of the cable; a lot of crimpers have a built-in piece to do this (though the knife or cable stripper generally works better).
With pliars, electrical tape, a knife and lots of swearing and throwing things across the room in frustration! You need a special tool for this. It would be cheaper to buy a new cable than to buy the tool! (Not to mention you would probably never use the tool a second time!)
In Photoshop, the pucker tool is part of the Liquify tool. The pucker tool is used to move pixels towards the center of the brush area.
To speed up software development of embedded systems, you can use Data Dictionary Check Tool, Data Monitoring Tool, Calibration Data Tool, Performance Timing Tool, Specification Search Tool, Data Flow Analyzer Tool etc.
a punch down tool
is a tool use to crimp or connect a connector to the end of a cable..
Crimping tools are designed to connect a connector to a cable. It is used on phone cables as well as network cables. All you do is place the connector with wires into the tool and squeeze the handle.
To cut a heavy duty cable you can use a tool made by Klein tools called a Ratchet Cable Cutter (10 inch). This tool is sold at Graingers and cost about 326.00.
cable tester
Cable tester
You can't tell from just looking at it. You will have to use a special tool or a volt meter. Connect terminals of multimeter to the first pin on both sides in resistance mode. If you get reasonable reading then you have straight through otherwise it is cross-over.
A cable tie tool is used for fastening electric cables and wires and helps organize. They are used to keep them together in bulk to prevent messy wires and cables.
If it's the common "CAT5", "CAT5e" or "CAT6", it's around 1/4 inch thick, blue, grey or purple jacket, and slightly bumpy due to the four pairs of twisted wires inside the jacket. The connectors are most likely the rectangular clear plastic plugs known (incorrectly) as RJ45, and correctly as 8P8C, fitted to the cable with a special crimping tool, die tool. The cable can be solid-core (cheaper, only suitable for wired-in cabling) or stranded (more expensive, suitable for patch cables and panel-to-computer cables). When fitting connectors, be sure to use the correct ones (for solid core or stranded core).
The specialized tool for this is usually called a "crimper" or "crimping tool". A knife or cable stripper may also be helpful to remove the outer jacket of the cable; a lot of crimpers have a built-in piece to do this (though the knife or cable stripper generally works better).
To strip a cable terminal, use wire strippers to remove insulation, exposing the wire. Then, insert the wire into the appropriate slot on the strip connector and use crimping tool to secure it in place. Finally, ensure a strong connection by testing the terminal with a multimeter.
What are my choices?