A variety of cabling schemes are available for Ethernet LAN configurations and are described in the following sections:
This interface is also known as "Thick Ethernet" and is based upon the use of thick, inflexible, coaxial cable. The coaxial cable has an impedance of 50 ohms, and is terminated with Male "Type N" coax connectors. The center conductor is solid.
- Taps per segment : 100 - Maximum separation : 5 segments, 4 repeaters - Maximum segment length: 500 meters - Total network span : 2500 meters - Minimum length between transceivers : 2.5 meters - Max transceiver drop length : 50 meters
Each end of a coaxial segment must be terminated into a 50 ohm impedance.
This interface is also known as "Thin Ethernet" and is based upon the use of thin, flexible, coaxial cable. The coaxial cable has an impedance of 50 ohms, and is terminated with Male "BNC" (Bayonet- Niell and Concelman) type coax connectors. The center conductor is stranded.
- Taps per segment : 30 - Maximum separation : 5 segments, 4 repeaters - Maximum segment length: 185 meters - Total network span : 925 meters - Minimum length between transceivers : 0.5 meters
Each end of a coaxial segment must be terminated into a 50 ohm impedance. There can be no more than TWO 50 ohm termintors per segment, or else the collision detection function may not operate properly. Multiport repeaters may include a 50 ohm termination.
This interface is very popular since it is based upon the use of twisted pair cable. Regular "Silver Satin" phone cable CANNOT be used, since the pairs in this cable are NOT twisted. The interface used for this type of wiring is a RJ-45, 8-pin modular jack. With this cabling scheme, twisted pair cable connects ONLY two MDIs; usually the workstation and a "concentrator" or "hub". The maximum length between any device and the hub or concentrator is 100 meters.
- Nodes per segment : 512 - Maximum separation : 5 segments, 4 repeaters - Concentrators in sequence : 4 - Maximum node to concentrator length : 100 meters
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