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Category 6 and 6a • Category 6 and 6a Cables • Category 6 • The next level in the cabling hierarchy is Category 6 (CAT6) (ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.2-1), which was ratified by the TIA/EIA in June 2002. CAT6 provides higher performance than CAT5e and ...
...with GG-45 Connector (RJ-45 compatible) or TERA Connector • Category 7/Class F cable can be terminated with two interface designs as specified in IEC 6063-7-7 and IEC 61076-3-104. One is an RJ-45 compatible GG-45 connector. The other is the more c...
...and 4. • Category 5 and 5e • Category 6 and 6a • Category 7/Class F • • Several types of Crosstalk • Crosstalk • Power Sum NEXT (PS-NEXT) • Alien Crosstalk • • Other related topics • Crossover Cable • UTP Cable and Colour drift • Light Injector
Category 3 and 4 • Performance of Cat 3 and Cat 4 cables • Category 3 • Category 3 is the performance level for voice and data transmission up to 16 MHz or 10 Mbps, such as 4-Mbps Token Ring and 10BASE-T. • Category 4 • Categroy 4 is the perfo...
...standard, but it has the capacity to handle bandwidth superior to that of CAT5. With these improvements, you can expect problem-free, full-duplex, 4-pair Ethernet transmissions over your CAT5e UTP. • Learn more: • Category 6 and 6a cables •
...extender and CAT5e or CAT6 cables (delay skew) • If you connect CAT5e or CAT6 cable to a CAT5 extender, the result is blurry images on your monitor. The effect is known as delay skew, but do you know what causes it? • Different lengths • Believe i...