Picture this: You plug in a cable. The link
light on the switch turns green. You ping the device, and it replies. You walk
away thinking, "Job done."
But a week later, the camera goes offline
intermittently, or the access point drops clients when traffic spikes. Why?
Because a simple link light only tells you there is electrical continuity. It
doesn't tell you if the cable can actually handle sustained data load.
In this blog, we break down the critical
differences between the three main types of cable testing — Certification,
Qualification, and Bit Rate Testing — and why misunderstanding them leads
to costly callbacks and intermittent failures.
Table of Contents
● Why "The Link Light is On" Isn't Enough
● Certification: Testing the Roadway
● Qualification: Testing the Vehicle
● Bit Rate Testing: The Reality Check (LANBERT™)
● The "DSP" Factor: Why Some "Bad" Cables Still Work
● Which Tool Should You Choose?
Why "The Link Light is
On" Isn't Enough
Relying on a link light or a simple wire
mapper is a gamble. For example, you can buy a box of cable labeled "Cat
6" that is actually Copper Clad Aluminum (CCA). It might give you a link
light, but if you try to run Power over Ethernet (PoE) across it, it could
become a fire hazard.
To build credibility and avoid callbacks, you
need to validate the link. But which method should you use?
Certification: Testing the
Roadway
Certification is a
rigorous form of testing. It compares the cabling performance against a
specific industry standard, such as ANSI/TIA (Cat 6, Cat 6A) or ISO/IEC (Class
E, Class EA).
Think of Certification as inspecting the roadway.
An engineer inspects a bridge to ensure it meets the exact architectural
blueprints and load-bearing standards defined by the code. It doesn't care what
cars are driving on it; it cares about the physics of the structure.
● What it measures: Crosstalk (NEXT), Return
Loss, Insertion Loss, and Length.
● The Result: A strict Pass/Fail based on the
standard.
● When to use it: Required for new installations
to get a manufacturer’s warranty.
● Cost: High ($$$$).
Qualification: Testing the
Vehicle
Qualification is
different. Instead of testing against cabling standards (such as TIA), it tests
against network application standards defined by the IEEE, such as 1000BASE-T
or 10GBASE-T.
Think of Qualification as testing the vehicle.
You aren't checking if the bridge meets the engineering code; you are driving a
specific truck over the bridge to see if it holds.
● What it measures: Signal-to-noise ratio and
whether a specific speed (e.g., 10 Gbps) is supported.
● The Result: A "Qualified" status for
a specific application (e.g., "Good for 10 Gig").
● When to use it: For Moves, adds, and changes
or determining if existing cabling can support a speed upgrade.
● Cost: Moderate ($$).
Bit Rate Testing: The Reality
Check (LANBERT™)
While Certification and Qualification are excellent, they miss one massive variable: the active equipment. This is where Active Bit Rate Testing (using tools like the EtherScope® nXG or LinkRunner® 10G from NetAlly running the LANBERT™ app) shines.
While tool capabilities vary by vendor, what matters most is the testing methodology — sending real Ethernet traffic across the link and measuring actual frame delivery.
Bit Rate testing sends actual Ethernet frames across the wire between two points (or a loopback). It stresses the cable with real data to see if frames are dropped.
Pro Tip: LANBERT™ allows you to test physical media (fiber or copper)
point-to-point without needing IP addresses. It operates at Layer 2, making it
the ultimate "soak test" for troubleshooting intermittent physical
layer issues that other tools miss.
The "DSP" Factor: Why
Some "Bad" Cables Still Work
Here is the secret that Certification tools don't tell you. Modern Network Interface Cards (NICs) utilize Digital Signal Processing (DSP). In simple terms, modern devices can ‘clean up’ imperfect signals in ways test equipment measuring raw cable physics cannot.
● Certification tests the raw physics of the
cable (Strict).
● Bit Rate Testing includes the DSP capabilities of the active test equipment (Real World).
This is why you can sometimes run 100 Mbps and
PoE over a 210-meter cable (which Mike Pennacchi demonstrated in the I
Love Network Testing – Episode 8 webcast from NetAlly — worth watching to see a certifier
fail while the LinkRunner passes). The Certification
tool would fail it immediately because it exceeds the 100-meter standard, but
the Bit Rate test proves it works because the devices can compensate for the
signal loss.
Which Tool Should You Choose?
● Installers: If you need to provide a warranty
for 2,000 drops in a new building, you need Certification.
● Technicians: If you are troubleshooting a
specific link or need to see if an old Cat 5e cable will support 2.5 Gig speeds,
use Qualification.
● Troubleshooters: If you need to prove a link is stable over time or are pushing distance limits (like a CCTV camera in a warehouse), use Bit Rate Testing (LANBERT™).
Don’t just guess. Test, and prove it works.