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Twisted pair cabling is a form of wiring in which two conductors are wound together for the purposes of canceling out
electromagnetic interference (EMI) from external sources,
electromagnetic radiation from the UTP cable, and
crosstalk between neighboring pairs.
Twisting wires decreases interference because the loop area between the wires (which determines the magnetic coupling into the signal) is reduced. In
balanced pair operation, the two wires typically carry equal and opposite signals (
differential signaling) which are combined by addition at the destination. The common-mode noise from the two wires (mostly) cancel each other in this addition because the two wires have similar amounts of EMI that are 180 degrees out of phase. This results in the same effect as subtraction. Differential signaling also reduces electromagnetic radiation from the cable, along with the
attenuation that it causes.
The twist rate (also called
pitch of the twist, usually defined in twists per metre) makes up part of the specification for a given type of cable. Where pairs are not twisted, one member of the pair may be closer to the source than the other, and thus exposed to slightly different induced Electromotive force.
Where twist rates are equal, the same conductors of different pairs may repeatedly lie next to each other, partially undoing the benefits of differential mode. For this reason it is commonly specified that, at least for cables containing small numbers of pairs, the twist rates must differ.
In contrast to
FTP (Foiled Twisted Pair) and
STP (Shielded Twisted Pair) cabling,
UTP (Unshielded Twisted Pair) cable is not surrounded by any shielding. It is the primary wire type for telephone usage and is very common for
computer networking, especially as patch cables or temporary network connections due to the high flexibility of the cables.
Unshielded Twisted Pair (UTP)
Twisted pair cables were first used in
telephone systems by
Alexander Graham Bell in 1881 and by 1900 the entire American network was twisted pair, or else open wire with similar arrangements to guard against interference. Most of the billions of
Telephone line (millions of Kilometres) of twisted pairs in the world are
Landline, owned by telephone companies, used for voice service, and only handled or even seen by telephone workers. The majority of data or Internet connections use those Landline.
UTP cables are not shielded. This lack of shielding results in a high degree of flexibility as well as rugged durability. UTP cables are found in many ethernet networks and telephone systems. For indoor telephone applications, UTP is often grouped into sets of 25 pairs according to a standard 25-pair color code originally developed by
AT&T. A typical subset of these AD1L colors (white/blue, blue/white, white/orange, orange/white) shows up in most UTP cables.
For urban outdoor telephone cables containing hundreds or thousands of pairs, different twist rates for each pair are impractical. For this design, the cable is divided into smaller but identical bundles, with each bundle consisting of twisted pairs that have different twist rates. The bundles are in turn twisted together to make up the cable. Because they reside in different bundles, twisted pairs having the same twist rate are shielded by physical separation. Still, pairs having the same twist rate within the cable will have greater crosstalk than pairs of different twist rate. Thus to minimize crosstalk within a large cable, careful pair selection is important.Twisted pair cabling is often used in data networks for short and medium length connections because of its relatively lower costs compared to
Optical fiber and Coaxial cable cabling.
Uses
Unshielded twisted pair (UTP) cable, because of its 100-year history of use by
telephone systems, both Telephone line and
Landline, is also the most common cable used in computer networking. It is a variant of twisted pair cabling. UTP cables are often called
ethernet cables after
Ethernet, the most common data networking standard that utilizes UTP cables, although not the most reliable.
Historical Note
Soon after the invention of the
telephone, open wire Telephone line were used for transmission. Two
Overhead cable, strung on either side of cross bars on
Utility pole, share the route with electrical power lines. At first, interference from power lines limited the practical distance for telephone signals. Discovering the cause, engineers devised a method, called wire transposition, to cancel out the interference, where once every several poles, the wires crossed over each other. In this way, the two wires would receive similar electromagnetic interference from power lines. Today, such open wire lines with periodic transpositions can still be found in rural areas. This represented an early implementation of twisting with a twist rate of about 4 twists per kilometre.
Cable Shielding
Twisted pair cables are often shielded in attempt to prevent electromagnetic interference. Because the shielding is made of metal, it may also serve as a ground. However, usually a shielded or a screened twisted pair cable has a special grounding wire added called a drain wire. This shielding can be applied to individual pairs, or to the collection of pairs. When shielding is applied to the collection of pairs, this is referred to as screening. The shielding must be grounded for the shielding to work.
===Shielded Twisted Pair (STP)===STP cabling includes metal shielding over each individual pair of copper wires. This type of shielding protects cable from external EMI (electromagnetic interferences). e.g. the 150 ohm shielded twisted pair cables defined by the IBM Cabling System specifications and used with
token ring networks.
Screened Shielded Twisted Pair (S/STP)
{|style="width:100%; border:0"|-style="vertical-align:top"|S/STP cabling, also known as Screened Fully shielded Twisted Pair (S/FTP),http://www.siemon.com/us/white_papers/06-07-20-grounding.asp is both individually shielded (like STP cabling) and also has an outer metal shielding covering the entire group of shielded copper pairs (like S/UTP). This type of cabling offers the best protection from interference from external sources.
Screened Unshielded Twisted Pair (S/UTP)
{|style="width:100%"|-style="vertical-align:top"|S/UTP, also known as Fully shielded (or Foiled) Twisted Pair (FTP), is a screened UTP cable.|}
Advantages
- It is a thin, flexible cable that is easy to string between walls.
- Because UTP is small, it does not quickly fill up wiring ducts.
- UTP costs less per foot than any other type of LAN cable.
Disadvantages
- Twisted pair’s susceptibility to the electromagnetic interference greatly depends on the pair twisting schemes (usually patented by the manufacturers) staying intact during the installation. As a result, twisted pair cables usually have stringent requirements for maximum pulling tension as well as minimum bend radius. This relative fragility of twisted pair cables makes the installation practices an important part of ensuring the cable’s performance.
Minor Twisted Pair variants
- Nonloaded twisted pair: A twisted pair that has no intentionally added inductance. Wires that go more than a mile (1.6 km) usually have load coils to increase their inductance, unless they are to carry higher than voiceband frequencies.
See also
References
External links
- Telecommunications Virtual Museum
- Cord Making
twisted pair from FOLDOC
twisted pair < hardware > A type of cable in which pairs of conductors are twisted together to randomise possible cross-talk from nearby wiring. Inadequate twisting is detectable ...
twisted pair only from FOLDOC
twisted pair only < networking > (TPO) A network connection to an Ethernet PCMCIA card using twisted pair cable. [Other options?] (1997-05-12) Try this search on Wikipedia, OneLook ...
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Twisted pair - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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