Cable category mismatch – Cat 5e patch leads on a Cat 6A core
Desk moves prompt quick fixes: someone grabs an old patch lead from the pedestal drawer because “it fits”. The link falls back to 100 Mbit/s, but the slowdown is blamed on Wi-Fi. Adopt a strict colour or keyed-connector regime—blue for Cat 6A, yellow for Cat 5e—and enforce disposal of legacy leads. Better, keep pre-bagged certified patch cords in each comms cabinet.
Electromagnetic interference – data basking beside mains
Run balanced pairs within 50 mm of a 400 V SWA feed and the magnetic field couples directly into the cable, degrading signal-to-noise. The effect worsens with high-frequency PWM drives used in modern HVAC fans. The cure is physical separation: 200 mm of air gap, a steel divider, or, for peace of mind, transition to shielded Cat 6A or fibre. Our bonding guide on equipotential grids explains how to earth the foil properly.
Loose or dirty fibre connectors – invisible but lethal
The glass core is just nine microns; a dust mote big enough to see with the naked eye can block 90 % of the light. Losses multiply on 40 G and 100 G links that rely on low-margin parallel optics. Always inspect with an IEC-compliant digital microscope, clean with lint-free fluid pens, and cap unused ports. If contamination persists, re-polish or replace the pigtail; ferrule damage is almost impossible to redeem with wipes alone.
Overfilled containment – heat rises, PoE falters
A 50-way bundle of 90 W PoE cables in a sealed conduit will exceed 50 °C under full load, raising insertion loss and resistance, which in turn lowers delivered voltage—exactly when devices crave power. Follow ISO/IEC 14763-2 fill ratios, add perforated basket or ladder tray, and, where loads cannot be reduced, switch to 23 AWG conductors with lower DC resistance.
Inadequate patch-cord management – strain, unplug, chaos
Vertical managers missing, cords droop over switch fans, RJ-45 latches crack and ports flap on and off. Write a cabinet standard: horizontal manager every 2U, defined patch lengths (0.5 m upper, 1 m middle, 1.5 m lower), and quarterly visual audits. If a tangle already exists, schedule an after-hours cabinet tidy; it usually restores 20–30 % airflow margin and halves troubleshooting time.