Cat 5 E will support Gig, but only for very short distances. Like 30 feet or something like that.....
"I can picture a world without war. A world without hate. A world without fear. And I can picture us attacking that world, because they'd never expect it."
- Jack Handey, Deep Thoughts
"I can picture a world without war. A world without hate. A world without fear. And I can picture us attacking that world, because they'd never expect it."
- Jack Handey, Deep Thoughts
The problem is you have various types of cat 6 cable. It ranges from 200Mhz to 550Mhz versions. Each for specific implementations. I've read that you can take the lower 200Mhz Cat 6 and run it up to 295' maximum. What data rates will you get on 200Mhz Cat6? Don't know. If you want to know for sure you should try contacting a cable manufacturer. They will get you what you need. I'd try BELKIN, AMP, MOHAWK, PANDUIT...any of those could tell you more about Cat6. Hope this helps.
"I can picture a world without war. A world without hate. A world without fear. And I can picture us attacking that world, because they'd never expect it."
- Jack Handey, Deep Thoughts
I am using our old CAT5E cabling in our DC (Data Centre) and running gig links from/to our 6513's to/from the 2950T's that are located in each rack... (6513 is our Core and 2950T's are where the Servers connet into).
No problems here and lengths are like ~30mtrs....
They do make CAT5E cable that is rated for gigabit ethernet. I remember with my last job making sure that our cables had gigabit capability - and they did. I was told the distance limitation was around the same as if it was fast ethernet (328ish feet).....
CAT5e has sufficient bandwidth to handle gigabit ethernet speeds. The distance limits are going to be the same as with 100mb ethernet... 100m for the entire run, including patch cables.
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