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A category 3 cable. Category 3 cable, commonly known as Cat 3 or station wire, and less commonly known as VG or voice-grade [1] (as, for example, in 100BaseVG), is an unshielded twisted pair (UTP) cable used in telephone wiring.
The significance of each category or class is the limit values of which the Pass/Fail and frequency ranges are measured: Cat 3 and Class C (no longer used) test and define communication with 16 MHz bandwidth, Cat 5e and Class D with 100 MHz bandwidth, Cat 6 and Class E up to 250 MHz, Cat6A and Class EA up to 500 MHz, Cat7 and Class F up to 600 ...
Both cables are a similar standard to category 3 cable. [12] [13] Cables with categories 3 through 7 have 4 twisted pairs. [14] Prior to the common use of polyethylene and other plastics for insulation, telephone twisted pair cable was insulated with waxed paper or cotton with a wax coating applied to the copper.
Class C: Up to 16 MHz using Category 3 cable and connectors; Class D: Up to 100 MHz using Category 5e cable and connectors; Class E: Up to 250 MHz using Category 6 cable and connectors; Class E A: Up to 500 MHz using category 6A cable and connectors (Amendments 1 and 2 to ISO/IEC 11801, 2nd Ed.) Class F: Up to 600 MHz using Category 7 cable and ...
Inherently half-duplex, it needed four pairs in a Cat-3 cable. Now obsolete, the standard has been withdrawn in 2001. HDMI Ethernet Channel: HDMI 1.4 (2009) HDMI: HEC uses a hybrid to mix and separate 100BASE-TX's transmit and receive signals through a single twisted pair. Fiber-optical cable 100BASE‑FX: 802.3u-1995 (24, 26) ST, SC
10BASE-T and 100BASE-TX require only two pairs (pins 1–2, 3–6) to operate. Since common Category 5 cable has four pairs, it is possible to use the spare pairs (pins 4–5, 7–8) in 10- and 100-Mbit/s configurations for other purposes.