There were 3 methods of using ethernet. At this point only the hub with cat5 wiring is being used. The two older methods were a. use of a very thick coax cable with each station employing a tranceiver and a tap into the coax. and b. thinner coax cables with BNC connectors daisy chained from station to station. Called 10base2. So this is an obselete 10M ethernet network.
Generally used for RF and Video. Also used by Color Kinetics as a power connector for iColor Player 2 (why, I can't figure out, it fried my controller along with my computer's motherboard.
Type 735 cable
RJ-45 or 8P8C modular connectors
BNC
Bnc,rj-45
10base-T uses for twister pair cable which speed 10mbps.
UTP most commonly used network cableCat 5 and Cat 6 network cables (also called 10BaseT) use an RJ-45 connector. Older thinwire ethernet (10Base2) uses BNC coaxial connect. Original thickwire ethernet used a special thicker cable with a proprietary AUI connector. The old IBM Token Ring system also used its own special cabling and connectors.
RJ-45 or 8P8C modular connectors
ST connectors
The most common connectors for coaxial cables are F-type and BNC.
I think it uses BNC connectors.
BNC
Bnc,rj-45
Hi, True BNC connectors have four parts. The main body, a metal washer, a specially shaped rubber washer and a screw in ferrule to hold it all together. They also require some soldering to do it properly. And since you're asking, installing a true BNC connector would require several pages of typing to explain how. There are two alternatives: Find a broadcast engineer or video technician who'll show you the process, or just get some screw on type connectors, which are easy to figure out and install. They'll also work quite dependably, too. Hope this helps, Cubby
BNC
BNC connectors, Ts, barrel, 4ways, and the all important terminator.
BNC connecter
BNC Connector
The requirements for a 10Base2 network: RG58u Coaxial cable T-connectors BNC's Terminators Ground, usually a ground chain Internetworking with Cisco and Microsoft Technologies pg. 226 and 227