Category 5. Four twisted pair of copper wire enclosed in an outer jacket, suitable for phone, fax, modem, or high speed digital communications.
Cat 5 cable is certified to achieve speeds of up to 100 Mbps.
A widely used EIA/TIA Ethernet cable standard. CAT5 cables contain 4 twisted pairs of copper wire and support 100 Mbps Fast Ethernet. CAT5 cable runs are limited to a maximum recommended length of 100m (328 feet).
Electical wiring used in home networks and provides high-capacity data transfer.
Also known as Category 5 Ethernet cabling, the CAT5 standard allows for data transfers up to 100 Mbps.
A data and communications cable adopted by the Telecommunications Industry Association and ISO (International Standards Organization). This version of Category 5 uses all four pairs of wires to both send and recieve. This version is formally called ANSI/TIA/EIA 568A-5 or simply Category 5e. Category 5e operates at up to 350MHZ.
An American Standards Institute standard for cables. Used, e.g., for 100BaseTX cabling
Category 5. Cabling standard for speeds up to 100Mbit/s.
Category 5 is a description of network cabling that consists of four twisted pairs of copper wire terminated by a RJ-45 connector.
Category 5 unshielded twisted pair wire. Physical media used to connect devices (e.g., PCs, printers, servers) together. Allows for Local Area Network (LAN) transmissions to at least 100Mbps, usually within 100 meters of a wiring closet.
Most commonly used type of Ethernet Cable.
100 Mhz Category 5 data cabling as specified by the EIA/TIA standards authority
Category 5 unshielded twisted-pair wiring commonly used for 10BaseT and 100BaseT Ethernet networks.
The only type of twisted pair wire you should buy for Ethernet networks. Cat3 isn't rated for 100 Mbps.
Referring to Category 5 Ethernet cabling, the CAT5 standard allows for data transfers up to 100 Mbps.