If you do any work with analogue signals at frequencies above the most basic audio, it’s probable that somewhere you’ll have a box of coax adaptors. You’ll need them, because the chances are your ...
Article 810 contains the requirements for wiring television and radio receiving equipment. Article 820 contains the requirements for installing the coaxial cables ...
For the casual breadboard experimenter with a microcontroller and a few peripherals, there’s little concern over interconnects as a set of jumper wires will suffice. But as any radio amateur will tell ...
In an effort to support cable television and surveillance video systems, not to mention enable high-speed Internet access, electrical contractors are increasingly installing coaxial cabling in ...
All common video signal types--composite, RF, s-video, component, SDI, and the various flavors of RGB--are ordinarily run in coaxial cables, or, as the shorthand term goes, "coax." The features of ...
You know about coaxial cable (Fig. 1). We all use it in one form or another, and it seems simple enough. But while modern cable products are better than ever, there are some real subtitles in their ...
A strong, flexible, high-capacity cable widely used in audio, video and data applications. Commonly called "coax" (pronounced "co-axe"), the cable comprises a solid or stranded wire in the center, ...
I'm an electrical tech at a Chrysler dealer. Occasionally I get vehicles in for antenna and radio reception concerns. Usually this just means replacing the entire antenna with the cable, but for some ...