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Twisted pair Cabling is a common form of wiring in which two conductors are wound around each other for the purposes of canceling out Electromagnetic Interference which can cause Crosstalk . The number of twists per Meter makes up part of the specification for a given type of cable. The greater the number of twists, the more crosstalk is reduced. Twisting wires decreases interference because:
CABLE TYPES Shielded Twisted Pair (STP) Main article please see Shielded Twisted Pair . This cable has a conductive Braid ed or foil casing for each pair and theoretically offers very good protection from interference and crosstalk. It was commonly used for Token Ring networks. Shield ed Twisted Pair is rarely used because the potential performance increase over UTP is not worth the much greater cost of STP. Screened Shielded Twisted Pair (S/STP) S/STP is like STP, but with an extra outer braided or foil shield similar to Coaxial Cable , which offers still improved protection from interference from external sources. Unshielded Twisted Pair (UTP) Main article please see Unshielded Twisted Pair . UTP cable is not surrounded by any shielding. It is the primary wire type for the Local Loop of Telephone networks and is very common for Computer Networking , especially in patch cables or temporary network connections due to the high flexibility of the cables. Foiled Twisted Pair (FTP) Main article please see Foiled Twisted Pair . FTP cable is basically a UTP cable surrounded by an outer foil shield increasing protection from external interference. Screened Unshielded Twisted Pair (S/UTP) The same as FTP but with a braided shield instead of foil. Screened Foiled Twisted Pair (S/FTP) This is a combination of S/UTP and FTP i.e. with a combined braided and foil shielding. Twisted pair cabling is standardized into various categories by number, which indicate signal integrity attributes. Category 5 Cable is commonly used for Ethernet with 10BASE-T or 100BASE-TX . In telephone applications, UTP is often grouped into sets of 25 pairs according to a standard 25-pair Color Code originally developed by AT&T . A typical subset of these colors (white/blue, blue/white, white/orange, orange/white) shows up in most UTP cables. SEE ALSO EXTERNAL LINK |
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