In the U. S., telephone jacks are also known as registered jacks, sometimes described as RJ-XX, and are a series of telephone connection interfaces (receptacle and plug) that are registered with the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC). They derive from interfaces that were part of AT&T's Universal Service Order Codes (USOC) and were adopted as part of FCC regulations (specifically Part 68, Subpart F. Section 68.502). The term jack sometimes means both receptacle and plug and sometimes just the receptacle.
RJ-11
The most common telephone jack is the RJ-11 jack, which can have six
conductors but usually is implemented with four. The RJ-11 jack is likely
to be the jack that your household or office phones are plugged into from
the ordinary "untwisted" wire (sometimes called "gray satin" or "flat wire")
people are most familiar with. In turn, the jacks connect to the "outside"
longer wires known as twisted pair that connect to the telephone company
central office or to a private branch exchange (PBX).
The four wires are usually characterized as a red and green pair and a black and white pair. The red and green pair typically carry voice or data. On an outside phone company connection, the black and white pair may be used for low-voltage signals such as phone lights. On a PBX system, they may be used for other kinds of signaling.
Your computer modem is usually connected to an RJ-11 jack.
RJ-14
The RJ-14 is similar to the RJ-11, but the four wires are used for
two phone lines. Typically, one set of wires (for one line) contains a
red wire and a green wire. The other set contains a yellow and black wire.
Each set carries one analog "conversation" (voice or data).
RJ-45
The RJ-45 is a single-line jack for digital transmission over ordinary
phone wire, either untwisted or twisted. The interface has eight pins or
positions. For connecting a modem, printer, or a data PBX at a data rate
up to 19.2 Kbps, you can use untwisted wire. For
faster transmissions in which you're connecting to an Ethernet10BaseT
network, you need to use twisted pair wire.
(Untwisted is usually a flat wire like common household phone extension
wire. Twisted is often round.)
There are two varieties of RJ-45: keyed and unkeyed. Keyed has a small bump on its end and the female complements it. Both jack and plug must match.
The following table includes the above and summarizes the other registered
jacks.
| RJ-XX | Wiring | Type | Pin positions |
|---|---|---|---|
| RJ-ICX | Single tie trunk | Type I or II E&M interface | 8 |
| RJ-IDC | Single-line, 4-wire | T/R, T1/R1 | 6 |
| RJ-11C/W | Two-line, two-wire | T/R | 6 |
| RJ-14C/W | Two-line, two-wire | T/R, T(MR)/R(MR), T(OPS)(/R(OPS) | 6 |
| RJ-14X | Two-line | T/R, T2/R2 with sliding cover | 6 |
| RJ-15C | Single-line | T/R, weatherproof | 3 |
| RJ-17C | Single-line | T/R, used in hospital critical care areas | 6 |
| RJ-18C/W | Single-line | T/R with Make Busy leads | 6 |
| RJ-2DX | 12 lines, 4-wire | T/R, T1/R1 | 50 |
| RJ-2EX | 12 tie trunks, 2-wire | T/R, E&M Type I | 50 |
| RJ-2FX | 8 tie trunks, 2-wire | T/R, E&M SG/SB Type II | 50 |
| RJ-2GX | 8 tie trunks, 4-wire | T/R, T1/R1, E&M Type I | 50 |
| RJ-2HX | 6 tie trunks, 4-wire | T/R, T1/R1, E&M, SG/SB, Type II | 50 |
| RJ-2MB | 12 lines, 2-wire | T/R, Make Busy leads | 50 |
| RJ-21X | 25 lines, 2-wire | T/R | 50 |
| RJ-25C | 3 lines, 2-wire | T/R, T(MR)/R(MR), T(OPS)/R(OPS) | 6 |
| RJ-26X | 8 lines, 2-wire | T/R, FLL, or Programmed Data | 50 |
| RJ-27X | 8 lines, 2-wire | T/R, Programmed Data | 50 |
| RJ-4MB | Single line, 2-wire | T/R,MB/MB1, PR/PC, with Make Busy | 8, keyed and programmed |
| RJ-41M | Up to 8 multiple installations | FLL or Programmed Data | 8, keyed |
| RJ-41S | Single line, 2-wire | T/R, FLL, or Programmed Data | 8, keyed |
| RJ-45M | Up to 8 multiple installations | Programmed Data | 8, keyed |
| RJ-45 | Single line, 2-wire | T/R, PR/PC, Programmed Data | 8, keyed |
| RJ-45 | Single line, 2-wire | T/R, PR/PC, Programmed Data | 8, keyed |
| RJ-48C | Single line, 4-wire | T/R, T1/R1, 1.544 Mbps | 8 |
| RJ-48H | Up to 12 lines, 4-wire | T/R, T1/R1, 1.544 Mbps | 50 |
| RJ-48M | Up to 8 lines, 4-wire | T/R, T1/R1, 1.544 Mbps | 50 |
| RJ-48S | One or two lines | T/R or T/R, T1/R1, LADC or subrate | 8, keyed |
| RJ-48T | Up to 25 2-wire or 12 4-wire | T/R, PR/PC, Programmed Data | 50 |
| RJ-48X | Single line, 4-wire | T/R, T1/R1, 1.544 Mbps | 8, with shorting bar |
| RJ-61X | Up to 4 lines | T/R | 8, keyed |
| RJ-M8 | Single private line, 2/4-wire | T/R, or T/R, T1/R1, non-registered service | 8, keyed w/wo loopback |