Sorry, we were unable to sign you in.
Please check your email address and password.
Your last basket is still available
The basket of your last visit to Black Box is still available.
Would you like to view the products in this basket?
The Black Box website uses cookies. By continuing the use of the Black Box website, or by pressing the agree button on the right, you consent to the use of cookies on this website.
More information.
...with GG-45 Connector (RJ-45 compatible) or TERA Connector • Category 7/Class F cable can be terminated with two interface designs as specified in IEC 6063-7-7 and IEC 61076-3-104. One is an RJ-45 compatible GG-45 connector. The other is the more c...
...as 4-/16-Mbps UTP. • Both Category 3 and 4 are unsuitable for today’s high speed networking standards and will need to be replaced with Cat5 cable as a minimum if you intend to run 100baseT Ethernet. • Learn more: • Category 5 and 5e cables •
...UTP) cable with RJ-45 connectors. The most common kinds of Token Ring cabling in use to day are Type 1 and Type 6 STP as well as Type 3 UTP. • Type 1 • Type 1 shielded twisted-pair (STP) cable is the original wiring for Token Ring. In Type 1...
...og skew delay • Cat5 extender and CAT5e or CAT6 cables (delay skew) • If you connect CAT5e or CAT6 cable to a CAT5 extender, the result is blurry images on your monitor. The effect is known as delay skew, but do you know what causes it? • Di...
Category 5 and 5e • Category 5 and 5e • Category 5 • Category 5 (CAT5) cabling is good, solid cable for 100-Mbps LANs. The Category 5 standard has been around since 1991, so it’s well established. You’ll find existing Category 5 installati...
...higher performance than CAT5e and features more stringent specifications for crosstalk and system noise. • The quality of the data transmission depends upon the performance of all the components of the channel. So to transmit according to CAT6 specs...