Sujet : Re: CAT5e cable
De : joegwinn (at) *nospam* comcast.net (Joe Gwinn)
Groupes : sci.electronics.designDate : 21. Apr 2025, 01:41:04
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <pn4b0ktje7hhqpnogrviep9s3amj00bgqj@4ax.com>
References : 1 2 3 4 5
User-Agent : ForteAgent/8.00.32.1272
On Sun, 20 Apr 2025 15:56:08 -0700, Don Y
<
blockedofcourse@foo.invalid> wrote:
On 4/20/2025 2:15 PM, Joe Gwinn wrote:
My concern is mainly to know how to specify the type of cable
that should be used in future installations (in which I won't
likely be involved). Other than naming a specific vendor
and model number (whose manufacture could also change, over
time)
>
As I suspect "paid help" would be less meticulous than I, it
would be wise to specify materials that they would be less
likely to abuse. <frown>
The simplest way I know of is to get samples and cut them open for
detail inspection.
>
That only works for the samples you have in your hands.
I don't see any criteria that is *specified* for the
cables that highlights the differences that I am seeing.
True. You can specify such things, but dream on - the vendors won't
notice of care.
The only things you can specify are the overall system-driven
requirements like max attenuation versus frequency and distance,
shielding effectiveness, and the like.
And buying sight unseen is almost guaranteed to end in tears.
If I specify "Belden xyz" or "Southwire abc", there's no
guarantee that they won't change how they are manufactured.
Or, the aspect that I'm concerned with.
>
Or, simply stop making it.
Yep.
Life's like that.
Joe
So, I'm looking for a way of specifying the criteria that
are important -- and, ideally, of extracting it from a
manufacturer's datasheet.
>
Without destructive inspection, there are a few tests. First, mass
per length - heavier is better.
>
Weight is likely something that can be easily determined -- even
without actual samples in your hands. And, holding the wire gauge
constant, you'd have to assume any weight differences were due to
changes in insulation and/or jacket.
>
Unless, of course, they also include the weight of the packaging...
>
Second is DC resistance of each
conductor per length - smaller is better. For shielded twisted pair,
the shield quality can be measured, but this requires special tools.
Joe Gwinn
>