My best advice is to strip a bit more than you need (I usually strip an inch or so back), and make sure the component wires are straight (this is best accomplished by holding 1-3 of them between your finger and thumb, and then bending them back as you pull the wires through your grip, so they curl around one of your fingers. As they curl, they'll lose some of the tight twisting. Repeat once or twice, and they'll be nice and straight).
Then, bend them back towards perpendicular with the cable itself, creating a radial star pattern. At this point, if you've got Cat 6, you should clip off the center pair separator as close to the bend-back as you can without damaging the insulation on the leads. Orient the cable so as many wires are in order as possible, subtracting a half twist from pairs if necessary to put the solid one on the same side all around.
Put them in order, parallel to the cable now, and laying in contact with neighbor wires as close down to the plenum as you can. Hold them flat and in place with one hand, then grab a plug end to measure length -- you want the clamp part of the end to be clamping on the jacket, but near the end of the jacket. Mark the butt end of the plug with the thumbnail or fingernail of the hand holding the leads in order, and swap the plug end out for your wire cutters to trim to a flat end at your marking thumbnail.
Then, as you slide the plug end over the leads, point them slightly towards the flat plastic inside the plug. Applying just a little pressure against the top/bottom wall of the plug to keep the leads from switching order, push the plug on, and watch the leads to make sure they're not crossing over each other as they hit the grooves that hold them in place inside the plug -- the plugs are clear for a reason!
When you think you've got it snugly on all the way, look in from both sides to ensure the bluntly trimmed leads are making contact with the "front" of the plug. Insert into crimpers and crimp firmly.
I think I make a bad end on maybe one of 20 cables with that method and patience. As you get used to the motions and such, speed will come naturally with practice. But attention to detail doesn't come naturally if you're not deliberate about explicitly doing it, and you'll make a bunch of bad cables.
TL;DR:
The most important steps in there for consistency in cable integrity are: the part where you straighten out the leads (if you don't, they're more prone to skipping over each other as you insert them into the plug end), the little bit of pressure against the top/bottom wall of the plug end as you slide them in, stripping farther than you needed so you can clip them off bluntly at the proper length (rather than ending up with a short lead or two), and crimping all the way.
_________________ "Aaaah! Emotions are weird!" - Amdee "... Mirrorshades prevent the forces of normalcy from realizing that one is crazed and possibly dangerous. They are the symbol of the sun-staring visionary, the biker, the rocker, the policeman, and similar outlaws." - Bruce Sterling, preface to Mirrorshades
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