...long haul. Depending on cable type, FDDI networks can stretch up to 100 km in circumference. And FDDI speed can be improved. If the second ring is used as its own network, both rings can operate individually at speeds as fast as 200 Mbps. • This fea...
...required. Copper-wire cable can be video coax, miniature coax, or, most commonly, shielded twisted pair with a DB9 or HSSDC connector. Fibre choices include 62.5- or 50-µm multimode and 7- or 9-µm single-mode fibre, all with an SC connector. • Oth...
...of connectors. • The cable • The USB 3.0 cable contains nine wires, four more than USB 2.0, which has one pair for data and one pair for power. USB 3.0 adds two more data pairs, for a total of eight plus a ground. These extra pairs enable USB 3.0...
...connectors. • USB 3.0 cable contains nine wires, four more than USB 2.0, which has one pair for data and one pair for power. USB 3.0 adds two more data pairs, for a total of eight plus a ground. These extra pairs enable USB 3.0 to support bidirect...
...by your DVD player or cable box, giving you a sharper image and truer colors. • To use the Component video built into your video devices, all you need is the right cable. A Component video cable has three color-coded BNC connections at each end. F...
...stability in the overall channel. • Redesigned IDC 110 block features peaks to make lacing cable easier. • Rolled-edge construction provides superior panel rigidity to eliminate flex during termination. • Includes cable ties and mounting hardware.
...Uses “Thin“ coax cable (RG58A/U or RG58C/U). • The maximum length of one segment is 185 metres. • The maximum number of segments is five. • The maximum total length of all segments is 925 metres. • The minimum distance between T-connectors is...
...CatX infrastructure cable and can offer extensions to distances of up to 300m. • VGA based Multimedia distribution products are similar in many ways to KVM extenders. They extend the output from a computer to a VGA monitor or projector located a...
...Possible causes: • Bad cable or cable that’s too long, causing either the video signals or EDID/HDCP control signals not to be transmitted properly. Make sure that you use quality, high-speed HDMI® cables—they don’t even have to be expensive ones—o...