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  2. Twisted pair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twisted_pair

    Common names: foiled twisted pair, shielded twisted pair, screened twisted pair. This type of shielding helps prevent EMI from entering or exiting the cable. Individual and overall shield (F/FTP, S/FTP, and SF/FTP): Individual shielding using foils for every twisted pair in a cable, and also an outer foil or braided shielding. Common names ...

  3. Structured cabling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structured_cabling

    Equipment rooms house equipment and wiring consolidation points that serve the users inside the building or campus. Backbone cabling is the inter-building and intra-building cable connections in structured cabling between entrance facilities, equipment rooms and telecommunications closets. Backbone cabling consists of the transmission media ...

  4. Shielded cable - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shielded_cable

    Four-conductor shielded cable with metal foil shield and drain wire. Coaxial cable. Electronic symbol for a shielded wire. A shielded cable or screened cable is an electrical cable that has a common conductive layer around its conductors for electromagnetic shielding. [1] This shield is usually covered by an outermost layer of the cable.

  5. RS-422 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RS-422

    When used in relation to communications wiring, RS-422 wiring refers to cable made of 2 sets of twisted pair, often with each pair being shielded, and a ground wire. While a double-pair cable may be practical for many RS-422 applications, the RS-422 specification only defines one signal path and does not assign any function to it.

  6. 25-pair color code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/25-pair_color_code

    The wire pairs are referenced directly by their color combination, or by the pair number. For example, pair 9 is also called the red-brown pair. In technical tabulations, the colors are often suitably abbreviated. Violet is the standard name in the telecommunications and electronics industry, but it is sometimes referred to as purple.

  7. ANSI/TIA-568 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI/TIA-568

    A cable terminated according to T568A on one end and T568B on the other is a crossover cable when used with the earlier twisted-pair Ethernet standards that use only two of the pairs because the pairs used happen to be pairs 2 and 3, the same pairs on which T568A and T568B differ. Crossover cables are occasionally needed for 10BASE-T and ...

  8. ISO/IEC 11801 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO/IEC_11801

    Annex E, Acronyms for balanced cables, provides a system to specify the exact construction for both unshielded and shielded balanced twisted pair cables. It uses three letters—U for unshielded, S for braided shielding, and F for foil shielding—to form a two-part abbreviation in the form of xx/xTP, where the first part specifies the type of ...

  9. Template:Twisted-pair cables - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Twisted-pair_cables

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