COMMON ETHERNET SYSTEMS
10BASE-5 or Thick Ethernet
- 10BASE-5 is the original Ethernet system. It employs a quarter of
an inch diameter, 50 ohm coax cable ( with minimum bend radius
of 10 inches). 10BASE-5 segments can run in length
up to 500 meters with as many as 100 transceiver connections
spaced at lease 2.75 yards apart.
- 10BASE-5 transceivers access the media by piercing the thick coaxial cable.
These transceiver taps are known as vampire taps. Since
they don't actually require breaking the physical cable, the
electrical signals over the cable are typically fairly clean.
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10BASE-5 systems were originally envisioned to be cheap and fairly easey
to build. The large cable needed simply to be run by rooms
where computing equipment would be located. Taps would be
made into the cable by using external transceivers. As
it turned out, the requirement of an external transceiver and
the thick cable, which was expensive and difficult to work with,
limited the use of 10BASE-5.
10BASE-2
(Thin Ethernet and Cheapernet)
- Thin Ethernet was a fairly popular specification and is still used
in many environments today. With a maximum segment length
of 203.5 yards, it requires that the 50 ohm cable be only .2 inches
thick ( a bend radius of two inches). It also uses standard
BNC connectors and "T's" to provide access to the media. Typically,
T's are connected directly to the back of network interface cards,
thus eliminating the need for an external transceiver.
- A maximum of 30 transceivers may be inserted onto a Thin Ethernet
segment and must be spaced at least 20 inches apart. 3Com
hardware is able to handle slightly longer segments, up to 220
yards in length. Unfortunately, mixing other vedor's equipment
into an environment where cable runs exceed 203.5 yards can cause
problems. For this reason, keeping total lengths to 203.5
yards is recommended.
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