![]() ![]() They sell software to format and print the labels if you prefer - at that point it's just a cost calculation of time to tweak something on your end vs having a pre-made tool (for us it was significantly cheaper to do our own templating system than to pay for theirs). The hardest part was building a template on our end to automate the label generation using the style we wanted. Some are available on Amazon, others have to be purchased from other distributors. This PDF from Panduit gives a cleaner, more easily digestable overview of the cable sizes and market types. You can also search on Panduit's product catalog to find what you'd like - it's a little messy, but here's the direct link to the listings on their site. Label Planet templates are accurate and compatible with standard label sizes and can be downloaded for free in MS Word and PDF formats. We got labels that are designed for Cat5e, which still work pretty fine on larger Cat6/6a cables. Label templates are used to accurately position text and images when printing labels on A4 sheets. As an add-on to my other comment, here are some starting points for the self-laminating labels I was talking about (had to look up what we've used in the past):
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