Why Do LAN Cables Have Twisted Pairs? Because Chaos Needs Order, Bru!

The Science Behind the Twists

Imagine you’re stuck in Joburg traffic on the N1, and taxis are weaving in and out, causing absolute havoc. That’s what electromagnetic interference (EMI) does to your network signals—total SHIT (Significant Havoc In Technology).

Twisting the wires together is like Metro cops suddenly showing up and forcing some order on the road. The twists cancel out interference, keeping your connection clean and stable, even if your neighbours have Wi-Fi routers that look like they belong in NASA.

Each pair in a LAN cable carries signals in opposite directions, and by twisting them at different rates, they cancel out the noise that would otherwise maak ‘n gemors of your data. No twists = more noise = your Teams call sounding like a dial-up modem from 1998.

Why It’s Critical in Mzansi

South Africa’s network infrastructure isn’t exactly free from challenges. Between Eskom doing surprise bandwidth load shedding (also known as power outages) and LTE connections that disappear faster than your paycheck on payday, a good old wired connection is sometimes your best bet.

And if you’re running a small business from home (because load shedding made remote work mandatory), you want your Ethernet cables to be rock solid—otherwise, you’re explaining to clients why their Zoom meeting sounds like an alien invasion.

UTP vs. STP – The Cage Match

So, you’ve probably heard about UTP (Unshielded Twisted Pair) and STP (Shielded Twisted Pair). What’s the difference? Well, think of it as the difference between:

  • UTP (Unshielded Twisted Pair) – Like driving a Citi Golf in downtown Pretoria. It does the job, but you might feel every pothole (or interference) along the way.
  • STP (Shielded Twisted Pair) – Like rolling in an armoured Fortuner, ready for anything. It has extra shielding to block interference, perfect for noisy industrial environments or those datacentres running next to dodgy power supplies.

For most South African homes and offices, UTP is perfectly fine—it’s cheaper and works well unless you’re setting up your network in an area with heavy EMI, like next to a power substation or inside an Eskom power plant (if it’s actually online).

The “Just Buy a Good Cable” Rule

A proper Cat5e, Cat6, or Cat6a cable with well-twisted pairs will outperform your Wi-Fi any day, especially if you’re gaming, streaming, or running VoIP calls. Wi-Fi is nice until you realise your fibre line is fast, but your Wi-Fi router is still doing Nyovest speeds (slow, but stylish).

Pro tip: Avoid those dodgy “flat LAN cables” from online sellers that look nice but have zero twists—that’s like a boerewors roll without the wors.

Wrapping Up with some Final Thoughts

Twisted pairs are one of those small engineering miracles that keep your internet from turning into a haunted house of lag and packet loss. Next time you see a LAN cable, respect those twists—they’re working harder than your UPS during Stage 6 load shedding.

Now go check your cables and make sure you’re not running something from the Dial-up Dark Ages! And if your Wi-Fi is still acting up… well, that’s another story.

What do you think?

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