What are the distances for the transmission mediums? (1 Viewer)

Seraph

Now You've done it.......
Joined
Sep 26, 2003
Messages
897
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
What are the typical distances for the different types of transmission mediums?

e.g coaxial cable , fibre optic cables
i cant seem to find any notes that tell what the distances for these mediums are ,

i know this is pretty important as i have seen so many questions where they ask us stuff like this , recommend suitable transmission mediums, and they give you parituclar distances.....
 

Freedom_Dragon

The 36th Dragon
Joined
Oct 11, 2003
Messages
154
Location
Behind a door that will never open.
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
Typical distance for the different types of transmission mediums

Coaxial:
Range 185m. Beyond 185m, it may require repeater.

UTP (Unshielded Twisted Pair):
Typically 100m. Beyond 100m, it may require repeater.

Fibre Optic Cable:
10s of kms. Beyond 2 km, it may require repeater.
 

Seraph

Now You've done it.......
Joined
Sep 26, 2003
Messages
897
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
Freedom_Dragon said:
Typical distance for the different types of transmission mediums

Coaxial:
Range 185m. Beyond 185m, it may require repeater.

UTP (Unshielded Twisted Pair):
Typically 100m. Beyond 100m, it may require repeater.

Fibre Optic Cable:
10s of kms. Beyond 2 km, it may require repeater.
ahh thanks :D
so fibre optic cable : thats 10 km right ? (10s ? )

and also so all the wireless mediums pretty much have a huge distance right? i know satelitte would be beyond 200 km +, but what about microwaves and mobile phones..?
 

Freedom_Dragon

The 36th Dragon
Joined
Oct 11, 2003
Messages
154
Location
Behind a door that will never open.
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
redslert said:
in theory fibre optics don't need repeaters
Indeed...but it would be good to have realistic knowledge rather than base everything on theory.

Seraph said:
so fibre optic cable : thats 10 km right ? (10s ? )
Yer
Fibre Optic Cable:
10s of km. Eg:- 10km, 20km, 30km etc

Wireless Communcation

Infered: Less than a km.

Radiowaves: Hundreds of km.

Microwave: Thousands of km.

Hope that helps.
 

redslert

yes, my actual brain
Joined
Nov 25, 2002
Messages
2,373
Location
Behind You!!
Gender
Male
HSC
2003
radio waves are the ones used for your mobile, radio....
yes they go through walls

microwaves?? i don't know
 

Freedom_Dragon

The 36th Dragon
Joined
Oct 11, 2003
Messages
154
Location
Behind a door that will never open.
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
sweeterv said:
is it radio waves or microwaves which require line of sight transmission?
Its microwave that requires line of sight transmission. Tall towers are used for transmitting & receiving data in the line of sight, towers are placed approx 50km apart because of the curvature of the earth limiting the line of sight to 50km.

Furthermore satellite & satellite dishes are used for the transmitting & receiving data from one side of the world to the other in the line of sight.
 
Last edited:

redslert

yes, my actual brain
Joined
Nov 25, 2002
Messages
2,373
Location
Behind You!!
Gender
Male
HSC
2003
i wanted to do the cisco cert when i was 15/16years old in yr9!!
but at the same time that was when there were all the crashes in dot com industry so i didn't
 

stoydgen

Shiftius Curry
Joined
Mar 3, 2004
Messages
157
Location
Mount Annan
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
2004
Seraph said:
i know this is pretty important as i have seen so many questions where they ask us stuff like this , recommend suitable transmission mediums, and they give you parituclar distances.....
Whenh they ask Q's like this, they arent really asking about the actual distances used, but rather which medium is more suitable in terms of their sheilding from interference (that sounds funny but yeh :p). So fibre optic is used over long distances coz its extremely well sheilded, whereas if the distance is shorter, coaxial is used, coz even though it aint as resistant to interference, its cheaper and with the distances involved it wont be a problem. Twisted pair is only suitable for shorter applications where resistance shouldnt come into the equation at all.

Why do i say this? coz this is how i answered in my trial...to full marks :D

Cheers.
 

Seraph

Now You've done it.......
Joined
Sep 26, 2003
Messages
897
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
6 A passenger in a car travelling in country New South Wales phones a friend in Sydney.
The diagram shows how the call could be transmitted through the telephone system.


What transmission media, in order from Segment 1 to Segment 4, would be most
appropriate?
(A) Microwave, microwave, optic fibre, twisted-pair cable
(B) Radio, microwave, optic fibre, twisted-pair cable
(C) Radio, radio, twisted-pair cable, coaxial cable
(D) Radio, microwave, twisted-pair cable, coaxial cable


i got a bit of beef with this. check out the diagram

Yes okay.. definetly radio and microwave for segmetns 1 and 2 ... but segments 3 and 4 ?

The answer is B , but why?
you would need a shitload of repeaters for 260km since fibre optics are only 10s of km

furthermore... 15km could be optics or coaxial i wouldve thought , since its distance is not as great

or is this an issue of speed?
 

FcUk

Member
Joined
Mar 30, 2004
Messages
64
Seraph said:
6 A passenger in a car travelling in country New South Wales phones a friend in Sydney.
The diagram shows how the call could be transmitted through the telephone system.


What transmission media, in order from Segment 1 to Segment 4, would be most
appropriate?
(A) Microwave, microwave, optic fibre, twisted-pair cable
(B) Radio, microwave, optic fibre, twisted-pair cable
(C) Radio, radio, twisted-pair cable, coaxial cable
(D) Radio, microwave, twisted-pair cable, coaxial cable


i got a bit of beef with this. check out the diagram

Yes okay.. definetly radio and microwave for segmetns 1 and 2 ... but segments 3 and 4 ?

The answer is B , but why?
you would need a shitload of repeaters for 260km since fibre optics are only 10s of km

furthermore... 15km could be optics or coaxial i wouldve thought , since its distance is not as great

or is this an issue of speed?
Read the post above you ;) all cables need repeaters but fibre optic is best against interference etc...
 

Seraph

Now You've done it.......
Joined
Sep 26, 2003
Messages
897
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
i realise that , but since they specifically gave distances... but now i see if they mean in terms of capabilities according to interferences , so be it .... thats how ill approach these then

ta
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top