Posts Tagged ‘coaxial cable connector’


COAX CABLE

Coax Cable

Coax Cable

By Anne Ahira

Coax cable is sometimes referred to as its full name coaxial cable but most people use the shortened version, coax. It is an electric cable that has an inner conductor, which is then surrounded by a tubular insulating layer.

Ordinarily the flexile material that is used as a surrounding for the conductor is actually a conductive layer. That is characteristically either fine woven wire that will be useful because it’s so flexible, or sometimes it is a thin metallic foil. Regardless of which is used, it will be finished with a thin insulating layer right on the outside of the cable.

Actually the term coax cable comes from the outer shield and the particular inner conductor being able to share the exact identical geometric axis. Coaxial cable has been used primarily with computer network or Internet connections, in transmissions such as having to connect radio transmitters and/or receivers to their antennas, the distribution of cable television signals, or as a transmission line to send and receive radio frequency signals.

The largest benefit of using coax cable instead of other types of transmission lines is found in the properties of coaxial cable. You see in a “perfect” coaxial cable the electromagnetic field that carries the signal will exist only in the space found between the outer and inner conductors.

Thus, the coax cable “runs” may even be installed directly next to metal objects, such as a gutter, without suffering the power loss that will occur when using other transmission lines. In this manner, using the coaxial cable will provide a complete protection of the particular signals that can ordinarily come from external electromagnetic interference.

Readers need to be aware that there is a distinct difference between other shielded cables that carry lower frequency signals such as audio signals, and coax cable. There is a definite similarity between shielded cable and coaxial cable in that shielded cable will consist of a central wire, or perhaps a number of wires, that will be surrounded by a tubular shield conductor. However, shielded cable is not constructed using the very precise conductor spacing that is needed to function proficiently as a radio frequency transmission line.

The exact coax cable design choice will affect a number of items such as strength and cost, flexibility, power handling capabilities, attenuation, and frequency performance as well as affecting physical size. Its inner conductor may be solid or stranded, although stranded is much more flexible. In order to be able to receive improved high-frequency performance, sometimes the inner conductor will have been silver-plated. At times even copper-plated over plain iron wire will have been found to being frequently utilized for an inner conductor.

Sometimes the insulator that surrounds the inner conductor might be made of solid plastic, or a foamy type of plastic. It may even be made with air with spacers that support the inner wire. Ordinarily flexibility is a definite necessity but the majority of cable television (CATV) distribution systems will use what’s called “hard line” cables, meaning that the inside, the shield, may even be a solid wire as they will provide a lower signal loss.

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Cable Connectors

Cable Connectors

Cable Connectors

By Anne Ahira

Our modern world is one that is full of electronics. With electronics comes the need to hook up wires or cables and with the need to do that we have a need for a plethora of Cable Connectors to get that job done. We’re going to go over some of the different types of them here to familiarize you with them so you can have a general understanding of things that you might see.

Cable Connectors around your home entertainment unit can come in a wide range of styles. Most RCA style connections carry either strictly an audio signal from things like a CD player into the surround sound receiver in your living room. Some video signals called GRB also are transmitted via a thicker cable with termination in an RCA plug.

High quality video can be transmitted into a cable via an S-video connection which somewhat resembles an old PS-2 mouse plug. Your cable or satellite might use the standard cable connection called and RG, which you might be most familiar with. There is also a connection called an HDMI, which is used to send high def video to and from most new fully digital sources. While there are other connections that you might find in your living room system, this covers most of the common ones.

Cable Connectors in the world of your computer are too numerous to cover in entirety. We’ll hit some of the most common out there today. For getting signals in and out of your computer the most common, bar none is the USB or Universal Serial Bus connector. Most devices today use it and it can be plugged in and out without turning off the PC and will not cause damage to your computer. The second most popular is the Firewire cable, which is used for moving large amounts of data, like video or multi-track audio from a device into and out of the computer.

You will also find your computer might have a Cat 5 or Ethernet Cable Connector or connectors on it. This is used to interconnect your computers to routers and other home networking gear.

While you are thinking about Cable Connectors keep one thing in mind. Unless you are a technician, if a cable is broken or not functioning, don’t try and fix it yourself. If you cross up a wire you can cause irreparable damage to the device or devices that might be hooked together with that connection and that will be more expensive than just replacing the cable with a new one, I guarantee it beyond a shadow of a doubt.

If you find a Cable Connector that you don’t recognize, get someone else to identify it before you play with it, it might goof something up or even worse, it might injure you.

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