It depends on what you are trying to connect. If you were more specific, then answer could be more specific.
You can install the 110v line on one stud and the coax jack on any other, just don't put them on the same stud. This will cause major crosstalk in the coax line.
Yes, this is done all the time. Category 5, category 5e, and category 6 are the most common copper cables used at this time. They are basically advanced versions of the original phone cable. Coax cable is another type of copper cable used to carry digital information. It is the cable the satellite dish and cable companies use and the most common type is RG-6. This cable is capable of faster data transfer speeds than the phone type cables.
sterfish are algae eaters, and they eat a certain type of algae thet kills most fish Do you mean starfish?
It`s testing the isolation of the cable. You use a isolation tester with 250,500,100Vdc depending on the cable
If by 'cable wire' you mean Coax cable for the TV, or Internet, then the answer is no. The power/voltages in the cable are way to low to produce a spark which is usually what triggers flame. If by 'cable wire' you mean a cable carrying an electrical service such as 120V or 240V, then, if the cable is damaged by an accidental or deliberate cut which causes a short circuit from a hot phase wire or wires to other wires in the cable - such as to other hot phase wires in a 3-phase circuit, a neutral or a ground wire - then the resulting heavy current could result in the cable becoming very hot and could cause it to catch on fire unless there was some overcurrent protection device to prevent that from happening. That is why fuses and/or circuit breakers should always be included in any electrical service wiring to cut off the supply of current before a fire can be caused by such damage.
Cable modems use RG-6 coax cables.
This would depend upon your TV and the receiver and if it has a coax port available on the back. You can use an RG6 coax cable between the receiver and TV. Most newer HD receivers do not have a coax port on the back
For Dish Network, we use RG6 coax cable to allow a higher frequency range for the satellite signal from the dish to your receiver. Any coax cable not rated at RG6 could affect the signal.
Typical coax cable uses a different standard than RCA. You will need to use a converter box.
The type coax you need depends on the type service you have. For satellite service, we use a higher rated coax cable (RG6) to allow for a higher frequency for channels and back feeding capability. RG59 is a lower rated cable.
To extend a coax cable without special tools you will need a second coax cable. You can plug the second coax cable into the end of the first one (the end that is plugged into the wall).
It could be star or bus, but historically, coax cable was used in bus architecture.
No. The cable provider has to authorize the other modem on the network before it can be used, and they will not do that, since they want you to pay for another cable installation.
A Toslink IS a Fiber Optic Digital Interconnect cable
You can use the DMM to test continuity in the cable.
Iam pretty sure that baseband coax was 50 ohm and was used for networking computer, were broadband coax is 75 ohm and used in the cable tv industry.
We use a RG6 coax cable from the dish to the receiver. The cable used between the receiver to the TV varies.