You may wish to add that pass through connectors may be easier to work with for some as they allow you to use longer exposed wires. By doing so you can place them through individually, in pairs, etc. and then pull them through to clean up the connector and have the outer wrap seated inside the connector.
An additional note would be that some wires, such as the one in the picture linked below of a pass through connector may not have the white/color striping. You will have to go by the color they are twisted to as the reference of which is which (another time excess wires and pass throughs can help with, as you can work one pair at a time). I haven’t looked into the frequency of this, but my guess is that this will be more prevalent with shielded twisted pairs (as each pair is separated from the others by the grounding wrap).
Here’s a link to a shared image on OneDrive. I also circled how the solid green is placed after the white/blue.
You may wish to add that pass through connectors may be easier to work with for some as they allow you to use longer exposed wires. By doing so you can place them through individually, in pairs, etc. and then pull them through to clean up the connector and have the outer wrap seated inside the connector.
An additional note would be that some wires, such as the one in the picture linked below of a pass through connector may not have the white/color striping. You will have to go by the color they are twisted to as the reference of which is which (another time excess wires and pass throughs can help with, as you can work one pair at a time). I haven’t looked into the frequency of this, but my guess is that this will be more prevalent with shielded twisted pairs (as each pair is separated from the others by the grounding wrap).
Here’s a link to a shared image on OneDrive. I also circled how the solid green is placed after the white/blue.
Pass through RJ-45 cable with solid white wires (not orange/white, etc.)