In northAmerica all coaxial connections made to a television are made with 75 Ohm coax. Typical sizes will be RG-59, RG-6 or maybe RG-11 (less common).
It could be star or bus, but historically, coax cable was used in bus architecture.
CCTV Balun is used in video camera and surveilance installations. Specifically allows for the regular coax cable to be replaced by the category 5 types of wires. Baluns allow for much cheaper installations of video camers.
Cable modems use RG-6 coax cables.
UTP & COAX cable's are used
It's the coax cable used for Thick Ethernet.
The best size is RG 6 coax. However for short runs RG 59 will work.
Actually, a coaxial cable is used for both modems and TV's.
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.
RG-59/U and RG-60/U
We use a RG6 coax cable from the dish to the receiver. The cable used between the receiver to the TV varies.
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.
You can use the DMM to test continuity in the cable.