Coaxial Cable Tutorial
Coaxial Cable Tutorial
Insertion Loss: A measurement of attenuation determined by the system output before and
after the connection of a cable and/or device.
Jack: The female connector usually containing a center socket.
Microwave Frequencies: Microwave frequencies range from Ultra-High Frequency (UHF) .3-
3GHz, Super High Frequency (SHF) 3-30GHz to Extremely High Frequency (EHF) 30-300GHz.
MIL-C-17: MIL-C-17 is a specification document that has been used since the 1940s to
standardize the physical and electrical characteristics of coaxial cables. There is no longer any
control of RG specifications so cables may perform differently than the cables that adhere to
MIL-C-17.
Plug: The male connector usually containing a center pin.
RF (Radio Frequency): A frequency band from 3 MHz to 3 GHz. Primarily used for transmission
of radio and television signals.
RG/U: Symbols used to represent coaxial cable that is built to U.S. government specifications
(R=Radio Frequency, G=Government, U=Universal Specification)
Shielding: Conductive envelope made of wires or metal foil that covers the dielectric and the
center conductor
Twinaxial: An offshoot from coaxial cabling. Two center conductors with one dielectric and
braided shielding.
Velocity of Propagation (VP): Usually expressed as a percentage, VP is the transmission speed
of electrical energy in a determined length of cable compared to the speed of light.
VSWR (Voltage Standing Wave Ratio): The ratio of the maximum effective voltage to the
minimum effective voltage measured along a RF transmission line. This value generally
increases with frequency and higher values are not desirable.
Common Applications for Coax Cable
Assemblies
Home
Entertainment GPS Security Video Telecommunications WAN/LAN
Coaxial cable assemblies Global Positioning Systems The transmission of a The infrastructure of many Wide Area Networks and
are used extensively to utilize 50 Ohm coaxial video image from a telecommunications systems Local Area Networks often
inter-connect a wide cable for connections security camera to a relies heavily on 50 Ohm coaxial utilize 50 Ohm coaxial
variety of Home between receiving display monitor is often cable for a multitude of cable for equipment
Entertainment equipment antennas and other the job of a 75 Ohm interconnection applications. Cell interconnection. In many
such as TV's, DVR's, VCR's related equipment. coaxial cable such as towers and communication of the numerous
CATV or Satellite RG174, RG188 or RG316 RG59A/U, RG59B/U or equipment in base station interconnection
Receivers. Generally are often used with SMA, RG179, most often with facilities are a few typical applications of these
speaking 75 Ohm coaxial MCX or MMCX connectors. BNC connectors. Bundled examples. In these applications networks you will find
cable such as RG6 or RG59 In addition, RG58 with TNC assemblies with multiple RG58, RG223 and RG213 cable RG58 and RG174 are two
is used to carry Audio and and Type N connectors is 75 Ohm cables are often with BNC, TNC and Type N common cable types. BNC
Video signals. Connectors used for remote antenna used to connect multi- connectors are often utilized. interface connectors are
commonly used are BNC, feeds. camera setups. the most common
Type F and RCA. connector types used in
these situations. In
addition reverse polarized
connectors are found on
many wireless antenna
interfaces.
The table below illustrates the relative shielding properties of various shielding types. Notice as
the shielding density increases there is a correlated increase in the shielding effectiveness
value. The best shielding effectiveness value can be found in a rigid coaxial cable due to the
solid tube construction of the outer jacket. In this type of cable the limiting factor for shielding
effectiveness is the quality of the connector attachment.