Cable type RG-6 RG-59 B/U RG-11 RG-11 A/U RG-12 A/U RG-58 C/U RG-213U RG-62 A/U
Impedance (ohms) 75 75 75 75 75 50 50 93
Conductor material Bare Copper Bare Tinned Tinned Tinned Bare Copper
Copper Planted Copper Copper Copper Copper Copper Planted
Steel Steel
Conductor strands 1 1 1 7 7 19 7 1
Conductor area (mm2) 0.95 0.58 1.63 0.40 0.40 0.18 0.75 0.64
Conductor diameter 0.028" 0.023" 0.048" 0.035" 0.089" 0.025"
21AWG 23AWG 18AWG 20AWG 13AWG 22AWG
Insulation material Foam PE PE Foam PE PE PE PE Pe PE (semi-solid)
Insulation diameter 4.6 mm 3.7 mm 7.24 mm 7.25 mm 9.25 mm 2.95 7.25 3.7 mm
Outer conductor Aluminium Bare Aluminium Bare Base Tinned Bare Bare
polyester copper polyester copper copper copper copper copper
tape and wire tape and wire wire wire wire wire
tin copper braid tin copper braid braid braid braid braid
braid braid
Coverage Foil 100% 95 % Foil 100% 95% 95% 95% 97% 95%
braid 61% Braid 61%
Outer sheath PVC PVC PVC PVC PE PVC PVC PVC
Outside diameter 6.90 mm 6.15 mm 10.3 mm 10.3 mm 14.1 mm 4.95 mm 10.3 6.15 mm
Capacitance per meter 67 pF 67 pF 57 pF 67 pF 67 pF 100 pF 100 pF
Capacitance per feet 18.6 20.5 16.9 20.6 20.6 pF 28.3 pF 30.8 13.5 pF
Velocity 78% 66% 78% 66% 66% 66% 66% 83%
Weight (g/m) 59 56 108 140 220 38
Attenuation db/100m
50 MHz 5.3 8 3.3 4.6 4.6 6.3
100 MHz 8.5 12 4.9 7 7 16 7 10
200 MHz 10 18 7.2 10 10 23 9 13
400 MHz 12.5 24 10.5 14 14 33 14 17
500 MHz 16.2 27.5 12.1 16 16 20
900 MHz 21 39.5 17.1 24 24 28.5
NOTE: The comparision table above is for
information only. There is no guarantee of
correctness of data presented. When selecting cable
for a certain application, check the cable data
supplied by the cable manifacturer. There can be
some differences on the performance and
specifications of different cables from different
manufacturers. For example the insulation rating of
cables vary. Many PE insulated coax cables can
handle several kilovots voltage, while some foam
insulated coax cables cna handle only 200 volts or
so.
NOTE: Several of cables mentioned above are
available with foam insulation material. This
changes the capacitances to somewhat lower value and
gives higher velocity (typically around 0.80).
General data on some other 75 ohm coaxial cables
compared to RG-59
Cable type RG-6 RG-59 B/U RG-11 RG-11 A/U RG-12 A/U TELLU 13 Tasker RGB-75
Impedance (ohms) 75 75 75 75 75 75 75
Impedance accuracy +-2 ohms +-3 ohms +-2 ohms +-3%
Conductor material Bare Copper Bare Tinned Tinned Bare Bare
Copper Planted Copper Copper Copper Copper Copper
Steel
Conductor strands 1 1 1 7 7 1 10
Conductor strand(mm2) 0.95 0.58 1.63 0.40 0.40 1mm diameter 0.10mm diameter
Resistance (ohm/km) 44 159 21 21 22 210
Insulation material Foam PE PE Foam PE PE PE Foam PE
Insulation diameter 4.6 mm 3.7 mm 7.24 mm 7.25 mm 9.25 mm
Outer conductor Aluminium Bare Aluminium Bare Base Copper Tinned
polyester copper polyester copper copper foil under copper
tape and wire tape and wire wire bare copper
tin copper braid tin copper braid braid braid
braid braid
Coverage Foil 100% 95 % Foil 100% 95% 95% Foil ~95%
braid 61% Braid 61% Braid 66%
Resistance (ohm/km) 6.5 8.5 4 4 12 ~40
Outer sheath PVC PVC PVC PVC PE PVC (white) PVC
Outside diameter 6.90 mm 6.15 mm 10.3 mm 10.3 mm 14.1 mm 7.0 mm 2.8 mm
Capacitance per meter 67 pF 67 pF 57 pF 67 pF 67 pF 55 pF ~85 pF
Capacitance per feet 18.6 20.5 16.9 20.6 20.6 pF
Velocity 78% 66% 78% 66% 66% 80% 66%
Screening factor 80 dB
Typical voltage (max) 2000V 5000V 1500V
Weight (g/m) 59 56 108 140 220 58
Attenuation db/100m
5 MHz 2.5 1.5
50 MHz 5.3 8 3.3 4.6 4.6 4.7 19.5
100 MHz 8.5 12 4.9 7 7 6.2 28.5
200 MHz 10 18 7.2 10 10 8.6 35.6
400 MHz 12.5 24 10.5 14 14 12.6 60.0
500 MHz 16.2 27.5 12.1 16 16 ~14 ~70
900 MHz 21 39.5 17.1 24 24 19.2 90.0
2150 MHz 31.6
3000 MHz 37.4
NOTE: The numbers with ~ mark in front of them are
approximations calculated and/or measured from
cables or cable data. Those numbera are not from
manufacturer literature. NOTE2: Several of cables
mentioned above are available in sepcial
versionswith foam insulation material. This changes
the capacitances to somewhat lower value and gives
higher velocity (typically around 0.80).
General coaxial cable details
The dielectric of a coaxial cable serves but one
purpose - to maintain physical support and a
constant spacing between the inner conductor and the
outer shield. In terms of efficiency, there is no
better dielectric material than air. In most
practical cables cable companies use a variety of
hydrocarbon-based materials such as polystyrene,
polypropylenes, polyolefins and other synthetics to
maintain structural integrity.
Sometimes coaxial cables are used also for
carrying low frequency signals, like audio signals
or measurement device signals. In audio applications
especially the coaxial cable impedance does not
matter much (it is a high frequency property of
cable). Generally coaxial has a certain amount of
capacitance (50 pF/foot is typical) and a certain
amount of inductance. But it has very little
resistance.
General characteristics of cables:
- A typical 50 ohm coax coaxial cable is
pretty much 30pf per foot (doesn't apply to
miniature cables or big transmitter cables,
check a cable catalogue for more details). 50
ohms coaxial cables are used in most radio
applications, in coaxial Ethernet and in many
instrumentation applications.
- A typical 75 ohm coaxial cable is about 20
pf per foot (doesn't apply to miniature cables
or big transmitter cables, check a cable
catalogue for more details). 75 ohms cable is
used for all video application (baseband video,
monitor cables, antenna networks cable TV, CCTV
etc.), for digital audio (S/PDIF, coaxial AES/EBU)
and for telecommunication application (for
example for E1 coaxial cabling).
- A typical 93 ohm is around 13 pf per foot
(does not apply to special cables). This cable
type is ued for some special applications.
Please note that these are general statements. A
specific 75 ohm cable could be 20pF/ft. Another 75
ohm cable could be 16pF/ft. There is no exact
correlation between characteristic impedance and
capacitance.
In general, a constant impedance (including
connectors) cable, when terminated at both ends with
the correct load, represents pure resistive loss.
Thus, cale capacitance is immaterial for video and
digital applications.
Typical coaxial cable constructions are:
- Flexible (Braided) Coaxial Cable is by far
the most common type of closed transmission line
because of its flexibility. It is a coaxial
cable, meaning that both the signal and the
ground conductors are on the same center axis.
The outer conductor is made from fine braided
wire, hence the name "braided coaxial cable".
This type of cable is used in practically all
applications requiring complete shielding of the
center conductor. The effectiveness of the
shielding depends upon the weave of the braid
and the number of braid layers. One of the
draw-backs of braided cable is that the
shielding is not 100% effective, especially at
higher frequencies. This is because the braided
construction can permit small amounts of short
wavelength (high frequency) energy to radiate.
Normally this does not present a problem;
however, if a higher degree of shielding is
required, semirigid coaxial cable is
recommended. In some high frequency flexible
coaxial cables the outer shield consists if
normal braids and an extra aluminium foil shield
to give better high frequency shielding.
- Semirigid Coaxial Cable uses a solid tubular
outer conductor, so that all the RF energy is
contained within the cable. For applications
using frequencies higher than 30 GHz a miniature
semirigid cable is recommended.
- Ribbon Coaxial Cable combines the advantages
of both ribbon cable and coaxial cable. Ribbon
Coaxial Cable consists of many tiny coaxial
cables placed physically on the side of each
other to form a flat cable. Each individual
coaxial cable consists of the signal conductor,
dielectric, a foil shield and a drain wire which
is in continuous contact with the foil. The
entire assembly is then covered with an outer
insulating jacket. The major advantage of this
cable is the speed and ease with which it can be
mass terminated with the insulation displacement
technique.
Often you will hear the term shielded cable. This
is very similar to coaxial cable except the spacing
between center conductor and shield is not carefully
controlled during manufacture, resulting in
non-constant impedance.
If the cable impedance is critical enough to
worry about correctly choosing between 50 and 75
Ohms, then the capacitance will not matter. The
reason this is so is that the cable will be either
load terminated or source terminated, or both, and
the distributed capacitance of the cable combines
with its distributed inductance to form its
impedance.
A cable with a matched termination resistance at
the other end appears in all respects resistive, no
matter whether it is an inch long or a mile. The
capacitance is not relevant except insofar as it
affects the impedance, already accounted for. In
fact, there is no electrical measurement you could
make, at just the end of the cable, that could
distinguish a 75 Ohm (ideal) cable with a 75 Ohm
load on the far end from that same load without
intervening cable. Given that the line is teminated
with a proper 75 ohm load (and if it's not, it damn
well should be!), the load is 75 ohms resistive, and
the lumped capacitance of the cable is irrelevant.
Same applies to other impedance cables also when
terminated to their nominal impedance.
There exist an effect that characteristic
impedance of a cable if changed with frequency. If
this frequency-dependent change in impedance is
large enough, the cable will be impedance-matched to
the load and source at some frequencies, and
mismatched at others. Characteristic impedance is
not the only detail in cable. However there is
another effect that can cause loss of detail fast-risetime
signals. There is such a thing as
frequency-dependent losses in the cable. There is
also a property of controlled impedance cables known
as dispersion, where different frequencies travel at
slightly different velocities and with slightly
different loss.
In some communications applications a pair of 50
ohm coaxial cables are used to transmit a
differential signal on two non-interacting pieces of
50-ohm coax. The total voltage between the two
coaxial conductors is double the single-ended
voltage, but the net current in each is the same, so
the differential impedance between two coax cable
used in a differential configuration would be 100
ohms. As long as the signal paths don't interact,
the differential impedance is always precisely twice
the single-ended impedance of either path.
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