The question makes no sense. A cable cannot have volts in it. Voltage is measured across an element. I assume that you are asking what the voltage between the signal lines and the answer is dependent on what you are connected to. Gigabit ethernet is one level, 10/100 is another and so on.
A category 6 cable contains 4 pairs of wires, for a total of 8. The pairs are twisted together along the length of the cable, which helps to reduce noise and preserve the signal.
Ans:- Two pair of twisted pair Cable
Four: Generally it's Green(solid and striped), Orange(solid and striped), Blue(solid and striped), Brown(solid and striped)
There are 4 pairs, 8 wires in total.
There are four wire pairs in CAT 5 cable. (Orange&White Orange, Blue&White Blue, Green&White Green, Brown&White Brown) Not in order of use
Seven different UTP Cable.. Category 3, Category 4, Category 5, Category 5e, Category 6, Category 6e, & Category 7...
When using a straight through cable for networking, only 3 pairs are used.
4 pairs of wires.
A Cat5 cable contains 4 pairs of 2 wires twisted together, making a total of 8 individual wires, however only 2 wire pairs (4 wires) are actually used for communication.
Four pairs. Only one pair required for normal LAN operation though.
Twisted pair cabling has 4 pairs of wires (8 wires in total), but 10BASE-T and 100BASE-TX requires only 2 of those pairs (4 wires in total).Exams will often try to trick you by asking questions like 10baseT uses how many pairs so you think you're being asked how many pairs does it have? When really you're just being asked how many pairs does it use.
there are 3 types of cables are there 1 Twisted wire a) UTP ( Unshielded Twisted Pair b) STP ( Shielded Twisted Pair 2 Co-axial cable 3 FOC ( Fiber Optical cable )