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Author Topic: Coaxial Cable  (Read 384 times)
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Devin14
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« on: June 10, 2009, 09:36:48 AM »

Coaxial cable is the kind of copper cable used by cable TV companies between the community antenna and user homes and businesses. Coaxial cable is sometimes used by telephone companies from their central office to the telephone poles near Professional Web Design. It is also widely installed for use in business and corporation Ethernet and other types of local area network.

Coaxial cable is called "coaxial" because it includes one physical channel that carries the signal surrounded (after a layer of insulation) by another concentric physical channel, both running along the same axis. The outer channel serves as a ground. Many of these cables or pairs of coaxial tubes can be placed in a single outer sheathing and, with repeaters, can carry information for a great distance.

Coaxial cable was invented in 1929 and first used commercially in 1941. AT&T established its first cross-continental coaxial transmission system in 1940. Depending on the carrier technology used and other factors, twisted pair copper wire and optical fiber are alternatives to coaxial cable

Optical fiber (or "fiber optic") refers to the medium and the technology associated with the transmission of information as light pulses along a glass or plastic wire or fiber. Optical fiber carries much more information than conventional copper wire and is in general not subject to electromagnetic interference and the need to retransmit signals. Most telephone company long-distance lines are now of optical fiber.

Transmission on optical fiber wire requires repeater at distance intervals. The glass fiber requires more protection within an outer cable than copper. For these reasons and because the installation of any new wiring is labor-intensive, few communities yet have optical fiber wires or cables from the phone company's branch office to local customers (known as local loop).

Wireless is a term used to describe telecommunications in which electromagnetic waves (rather than some form of wire) carry the signal over part or the entire communication path. Some monitoring devices, such as intrusion alarms, employ acoustic waves at frequencies above the range of human hearing; these are also sometimes classified as wireless.

The first wireless transmitters went on the air in the early 20th century using radiotelegraphy (Morse code). Later, as modulation made it possible to transmit voices and music via wireless, the medium came to be called "radio." With the advent of television, fax, data communication, and the effective use of a larger portion of the spectrum, the term "wireless" has been resurrected.
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randy354
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« Reply #1 on: December 24, 2009, 12:01:30 PM »

How do attach a standard coaxial female adapter on to a standard coaxial cable?
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yasas177
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« Reply #2 on: February 05, 2010, 01:02:39 PM »

Standard female connectors for use with LMR-600 or WBC-600 Coax cable. They are used for a wide variety of connections to terminate coax at male jack.

The body plating is Silver, the center pin is Gold and the dielectric is Teflon. Center pin attachment is a crimp type (.128 crimp) , and outer ring is crimp.

 Cool
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rajan84
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« Reply #3 on: July 13, 2010, 09:08:15 AM »

# Coaxial cable, or coax, is an electrical cable with an inner conductor surrounded by a tubular insulating layer typically of a flexible material with a high dielectric constant, all of which are surrounded by a conductive layer called the shield (typically of fine woven wire for flexibility, or ...
# a type of cable commonly used in cable networks consisting of two conducting components: a solid core separated from an outer sheath by an insulating layer.
# A single conductor, braid-shielded cable used to carry video signals. Has a 75 ohm impedance.
# A cable consisting of one conductor, usually a small copper tube or wire, within and insulated from another conductor of larger diameter, usually copper tubing or copper braid. IBM
# A type of cable used for broadband data and cable systems. Also known as "coax."
# A type of electrical cable in which a signal central wire that carries the signal is surrounded by insulation & then a complete metal shield. Ethernet, thinnet & RG62 cables are examples.

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