Cable twisting length is not standardized. In a typical cable there are 1.5 to 2 twists per cm in Cat-5(e) and 2 or more twists per cm in Cat-6. One cm equals 0.393701 inches. Within a single cable, each coloured pair have different twist lengths. Each cable manufacturer's twists per pair is usually different from another manufacturer.
Cat-5 has 4 pairs and 8 wires
Cat-5 has 4 pairs and 8 wires
Yes - the maximum segment length is usually 100 meters, or 330 feet.
Cats have a lot of flexibility in their spines. When a cat falls, it always tries to get its feet under its body, so it lands "on its feet". To do this, cats can twist in the air, because of the flexibility in their spines.
standard cat 5 e and cat 6 the normal cable you will find in use with you router is 100m other types of network cable vary look them up on google
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When running CAT 5 cable the rule of thumb is 25 feet. So with that being said you need a signal booster installed ever 25 feet if you want to have full use of the internet through the cable.
Cat5e is 100 mbps.
You can tell the CAT level (or category) of a cable by looking for imprinted markings along the length of the cable. Look for the number preceded by 'CAT.' That is the category of the cable.
An RJ45 connector has 8 conductors. it has the naming convention of 8P8C (8positions 8conductors).
There is the USB cable and the twisted pair cable (Cat 5 and Cat 6) for networking.
Cat 2 cable was rated at 4 or 16 mbps whereas cat 3 cable would be rated at 10 mbps. Since 10baseT networks with Ethernet ran at 10 mbps this meant that cat 2 cable would not be useable in those networks. The minimum category cable for those networks had to be at least a cat 3 cable.