Network Cable Types – UTP, STP, Coax & Fibre
1. Why Cabling Knowledge Matters
Physical cabling is the foundation of every wired network. Choosing the wrong cable category, wrong cable type, or wrong connector results in link failures, speed limitations, or excessive interference — problems that can be invisible in configuration but devastating in practice. CCNA candidates are expected to understand which cable to use in which situation, how copper and fibre behave differently, and how cabling standards define the wiring inside an RJ45 connector. Cabling operates at Layer 1 of the OSI model and forms the physical foundation of every LAN.
| Cable Family | Medium | Typical Max Distance | Best Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| UTP (Unshielded Twisted Pair) | Copper wire pairs | 100 m (Cat5e/Cat6/Cat6a) | LAN access layer, desktop connections, patch panels |
| STP (Shielded Twisted Pair) | Copper wire pairs + shielding | 100 m | High-EMI environments (factories, data centres near heavy machinery) |
| Coaxial | Central copper conductor + braided shield | Up to 500 m (thick coax) / 185 m (thin coax) | Legacy Ethernet; cable TV; CCTV; some WAN links |
| Multimode Fibre (MMF) | Glass/plastic core; multiple light paths | Up to 550 m (OM3/OM4 at 10G) | Building backbone; campus fibre; data centre |
| Single-mode Fibre (SMF) | Glass core; single light path | Up to 40+ km (and further with amplifiers) | WAN, metro, inter-building, service provider links |
Related pages: Ethernet Standards | RJ45 Pinouts (T568A & T568B) | Structured Cabling | Cable Testing Tools | Fibre vs Copper Comparison | How Switches Work | Troubleshooting Connectivity
2. Twisted Pair Cable – UTP and STP
Twisted pair cable is the most common type of network cabling in LAN environments. It consists of pairs of copper wires twisted together to reduce electromagnetic interference (EMI) and crosstalk — the electrical interference between adjacent wire pairs. The twisting causes the interference picked up on each wire to cancel out on its partner wire when the differential signal is decoded at the receiver.
2.1 UTP vs STP
| Feature | UTP (Unshielded Twisted Pair) | STP (Shielded Twisted Pair) |
|---|---|---|
| Shielding | None — relies entirely on twist rate for noise rejection | Metal foil or braided shield around each pair and/or around the entire cable bundle |
| EMI resistance | Moderate — suitable for most office environments | High — significantly better rejection of external EMI and RF interference |
| Cost | Lower — less material, simpler termination | Higher — shielding material adds cost; termination requires proper grounding |
| Grounding requirement | None | Must be properly grounded at both ends — improper grounding can make interference worse |
| Flexibility / ease of installation | Very flexible; easy to pull through conduit and terminate | Stiffer and heavier; more difficult to route and terminate |
| Typical use | Standard office and enterprise LAN; the default choice for most installations | Industrial environments, factories, medical facilities, data centre areas with heavy equipment, or where FCC regulations require shielding |
2.2 STP Shielding Types
| Designation | Shielding Description | Common Name |
|---|---|---|
| U/UTP | Unshielded cable, unshielded pairs — standard UTP | UTP |
| F/UTP | Foil-shielded cable, unshielded pairs — foil around the entire bundle | FTP (Foil Twisted Pair) |
| S/FTP | Braided-shield cable, foil-shielded pairs — both a braided outer shield and foil on each pair | SSTP / SFTP (most shielded type) |
| U/FTP | Unshielded cable, foil-shielded pairs — foil around each individual pair but no outer shield | FTP (individual pair shielding) |
3. Copper Cable Categories – Cat5e, Cat6, Cat6a
The TIA/EIA-568 standard defines the performance specifications for twisted pair cabling categories. The category (Cat) number indicates the minimum performance the cable must achieve — higher category cables have tighter twist rates, better shielding, and can handle higher frequencies and data rates.
| Category | Max Frequency | Max Data Rate | Max Segment Length | Typical Use | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cat3 | 16 MHz | 10 Mbps | 100 m | Legacy 10BASE-T Ethernet; voice (telephone) | Obsolete for data networking; still found in old installations |
| Cat5 | 100 MHz | 100 Mbps (Fast Ethernet) | 100 m | Legacy Fast Ethernet installations | Superseded by Cat5e — rarely installed new |
| Cat5e | 100 MHz | 1 Gbps (Gigabit Ethernet) | 100 m | Current standard for office LAN access layer; 1000BASE-T | "e" = enhanced — better crosstalk specs than Cat5; most common installed base |
| Cat6 | 250 MHz | 1 Gbps at 100 m; 10 Gbps at up to 55 m | 100 m (1G); 55 m (10G) | Higher performance LAN; 10GBASE-T over short runs | Spline separator between pairs reduces crosstalk; thicker and less flexible than Cat5e |
| Cat6a | 500 MHz | 10 Gbps at full 100 m | 100 m (10G) | 10GBASE-T at full 100 m; data centre access; PoE++ deployments | "a" = augmented — thicker jacket to reduce alien crosstalk; heavier and more difficult to terminate |
| Cat7 | 600 MHz | 10 Gbps | 100 m | Data centre; industrial | Individual pair shielding + overall shield; not an official TIA standard — uses GG45 or TERA connectors, not standard RJ45 |
| Cat8 | 2000 MHz | 25/40 Gbps | 30 m | Data centre ToR (Top of Rack) and server connections | Very short range; shielded only; RJ45 compatible |
3.1 Key Rule – 100-metre Copper Limit
All standard Ethernet copper categories share the same maximum segment length: 100 metres. This is the total channel length from wall jack to switch, including patch cables at both ends. The breakdown is:
| Segment Component | Max Length |
|---|---|
| Horizontal run (wall to patch panel) | 90 m maximum |
| Patch cable at the switch end | Up to 5 m |
| Patch cable at the workstation end | Up to 5 m |
| Total channel (end to end) | 100 m maximum |
4. T568A vs T568B – Wiring Standards
The TIA/EIA-568 standard defines two wiring schemes for terminating an RJ45 connector on the end of a twisted pair cable: T568A and T568B. Both are electrically equivalent in performance — they simply assign the wire colours to pins in a different order. The critical rule is: use the same standard on both ends of a cable for a straight-through, and different standards (one A, one B) for a crossover.
4.1 T568A and T568B Pin Assignments
| Pin | T568A Wire Colour | T568B Wire Colour | Function (100/1000BASE-T) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | White/Green | White/Orange | TX+ (transmit positive) |
| 2 | Green | Orange | TX− (transmit negative) |
| 3 | White/Orange | White/Green | RX+ (receive positive) |
| 4 | Blue | Blue | Unused / PoE (in PoE deployments: pair carries power) |
| 5 | White/Blue | White/Blue | Unused / PoE |
| 6 | Orange | Green | RX− (receive negative) |
| 7 | White/Brown | White/Brown | Unused / PoE (in 1000BASE-T: bidirectional pair) |
| 8 | Brown | Brown | Unused / PoE (in 1000BASE-T: bidirectional pair) |
Which standard to use? T568B is the more common standard in North America for new commercial installations. T568A is preferred by the US government (TIA-568-C). Either is acceptable as long as it is applied consistently throughout the installation. The T568B standard is the default on most patch panels and structured cabling systems.
5. Straight-Through, Crossover, and Rollover Cables
Three types of copper patch cables are defined by the wiring scheme at each end. Understanding which cable connects which devices is a fundamental CCNA topic — although the practical relevance of crossover cables has diminished with Auto-MDIX.
5.1 Straight-Through Cable
Both ends use the same wiring standard (both T568A or both T568B). Pin 1 on one end connects to Pin 1 on the other; Pin 2 to Pin 2; and so on. This is the most common cable type.
| Connection Type | Use Straight-Through? | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| PC / workstation → Switch | ✔ Yes | Different device types — TX pins on PC connect to RX pins on switch (MDI to MDIX) |
| Router → Switch | ✔ Yes | Router port (MDI) to switch port (MDIX) — different types |
| Switch → Router | ✔ Yes | Same as above |
| Anything → Wall jack (patch) | ✔ Yes | Patch cables to structured cabling are always straight-through |
5.2 Crossover Cable
One end is wired T568A and the other end T568B. This swaps the transmit and receive pairs — Pin 1 (TX+) on one end connects to Pin 3 (RX+) on the other, and Pin 2 (TX−) connects to Pin 6 (RX−).
| Connection Type | Use Crossover? | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Switch → Switch | ✔ Yes (without Auto-MDIX) | Both switches have MDIX ports — TX from one must cross over to RX on the other |
| Router → Router (direct) | ✔ Yes (without Auto-MDIX) | Both have MDI ports — TX must cross to RX |
| PC → PC (direct, no switch) | ✔ Yes (without Auto-MDIX) | Both NICs are MDI — need crossover |
| Hub → Hub | ✔ Yes (without Auto-MDIX) | Same-type devices |
Auto-MDIX (Automatic Medium-Dependent Interface Crossover) is supported on all modern Cisco switches and most modern NICs. Auto-MDIX automatically detects the cable type and adjusts the TX/RX polarity electronically — meaning either a straight-through or crossover cable will work regardless of which device types are connected. In practice, crossover cables are rarely needed in modern networks, but CCNA still tests this concept.
5.3 Rollover (Console) Cable
A rollover cable (also called a console cable or Cisco flat cable) is used exclusively to connect a PC's serial port (or USB-to-serial adapter) to the console port on a Cisco router or switch for out-of-band management access. It is recognisable by its flat, light-blue colour in Cisco environments. See Console & VTY Line Configuration for how console access is configured once the cable is connected.
The wiring is a complete reversal — Pin 1 connects to Pin 8, Pin 2 to Pin 7, Pin 3 to Pin 6, Pin 4 to Pin 5, and so on. This "rolled" wiring pattern gives the cable its name. It does not carry Ethernet — it carries RS-232 serial signals at 9600 baud (default Cisco console settings: 9600 baud, 8 data bits, no parity, 1 stop bit, no flow control — 9600 8N1).
| Cable Type | End A Standard | End B Standard | Carries | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Straight-Through | T568B (or T568A) | T568B (same as A) | Ethernet data | PC/router to switch; any unlike device pair |
| Crossover | T568A | T568B | Ethernet data | Switch to switch; router to router; PC to PC (without Auto-MDIX) |
| Rollover | Pins fully reversed | Mirror of End A | RS-232 serial (console) | PC COM port to Cisco console port (9600 8N1) |
6. Coaxial Cable
Coaxial cable has a central copper conductor surrounded by an insulating dielectric, a braided metal shield, and an outer plastic jacket. The shield provides excellent noise rejection. Coaxial cable was the dominant medium for early Ethernet (10BASE5 and 10BASE2) but has been almost entirely replaced by twisted pair and fibre in modern enterprise LANs. It remains in use for cable TV (CATV), CCTV/video surveillance, and some broadband WAN connections.
| Type | Designation | Impedance | Max Distance | Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thick coax | 10BASE5 (RG-8) | 50 Ω | 500 m per segment | Legacy 10BASE5 Ethernet (Thicknet) — obsolete |
| Thin coax | 10BASE2 (RG-58) | 50 Ω | 185 m per segment | Legacy 10BASE2 Ethernet (Thinnet) — obsolete for data; still used in some audio applications |
| Cable TV coax | RG-6 | 75 Ω | Varies (hundreds of m with amplifiers) | Cable TV (CATV); broadband cable internet (DOCSIS); CCTV video |
| Serial WAN | Various | 75 Ω | Varies | DSL and cable modem connections; some leased line CPE connections |
7. Fibre Optic Cable
Fibre optic cable transmits data as pulses of light through a glass or plastic core, surrounded by cladding (lower refractive index glass that reflects light back into the core) and a protective jacket. Fibre is immune to electromagnetic interference, supports much higher bandwidths than copper, and can span far greater distances. It is the standard medium for building backbones, campus networks, WAN connections, and data centre inter-switch links.
| Feature | Fibre Optic | Copper UTP |
|---|---|---|
| Medium | Light pulses in glass/plastic | Electrical signals in copper |
| EMI immunity | Complete — light is unaffected by electromagnetic fields | Susceptible — shielding reduces but does not eliminate EMI |
| Max distance (typical) | Multimode: up to 550 m; Single-mode: 40+ km | 100 m maximum |
| Bandwidth | Very high — terabit-scale possible | Up to 10 Gbps (Cat6a) or 25/40 Gbps (Cat8) |
| Security | Difficult to tap without detection; no RF emission | Easier to tap; generates EMI that can be detected |
| Cost | Higher cable and termination cost; SFP transceivers needed | Lower cable cost; RJ45 connectors inexpensive |
| Fragility | Glass core can crack if bent too sharply (minimum bend radius must be observed) | More robust to physical stress |
8. Single-Mode vs Multimode Fibre
The most important distinction within fibre optic cable is between single-mode fibre (SMF) and multimode fibre (MMF). The choice determines the maximum distance, the type of transceiver/SFP required, and the cost of the link.
| Feature | Single-Mode Fibre (SMF) | Multimode Fibre (MMF) |
|---|---|---|
| Core diameter | 8–10 µm (very narrow) | 50 µm or 62.5 µm (larger) |
| Light paths (modes) | Single — only one mode (path) of light propagates through the narrow core | Multiple — light enters at different angles, creating multiple paths through the larger core |
| Light source | Laser — highly focused, narrow beam; more expensive | LED or VCSEL (Vertical Cavity Surface Emitting Laser) — cheaper, lower power |
| Dispersion | Very low — single mode means no modal dispersion | Higher — multiple modes arrive at slightly different times (modal dispersion) limiting distance at high data rates |
| Maximum distance | Up to 40 km (standard) — 80 km and beyond with amplifiers or DWDM | Up to 550 m (OM3/OM4 at 10G); up to 400 m (OM4 at 40/100G) |
| Wavelength | 1310 nm or 1550 nm | 850 nm (most common); 1300 nm (some) |
| Connector colour code | Yellow jacket; blue or green LC/SC connectors | Orange (OM1/OM2) or aqua/turquoise (OM3/OM4) jacket; beige or aqua connectors |
| Cost | Higher — laser transceivers; precise alignment | Lower — LED/VCSEL sources; less precise tolerances |
| Typical use | WAN links; inter-building campus; metro Ethernet; service provider backbones — see WAN Overview and MPLS; any link > 550 m | Building backbone; data centre switch-to-switch and server connections; campus core within a building |
8.1 Multimode Fibre Categories (OM Classification)
| Classification | Core Diameter | Jacket Colour | Max Distance at 10G | Max Distance at 100G | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OM1 | 62.5 µm | Orange | 33 m | Not supported | Legacy; being phased out |
| OM2 | 50 µm | Orange | 82 m | Not supported | Legacy |
| OM3 | 50 µm | Aqua | 300 m | 100 m | Current minimum for new data centre installs |
| OM4 | 50 µm | Aqua (or erika violet) | 400 m | 150 m | Standard for high-speed data centre links |
| OM5 | 50 µm | Lime green | 400 m | 150 m (and supports SWDM4 for 40G/100G over 2 fibres) | Wideband multimode — supports multiple wavelengths |
8.2 Fibre Connectors
| Connector | Full Name | Common Use | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| LC | Lucent Connector (small form-factor) | SFP and SFP+ transceivers; data centre and enterprise | Most common connector in modern enterprise — small size; push/pull latch; duplex LC is standard for most SFPs |
| SC | Subscriber Connector / Standard Connector | Legacy equipment; GBIC transceivers; some telco | Larger than LC; square push-pull; duplex SC common on older equipment |
| ST | Straight Tip | Legacy multimode installations | Bayonet-style twist-lock; largely replaced by LC and SC |
| MPO/MTP | Multi-fibre Push On | 40G/100G QSFP transceivers; data centre trunk cables | Carries 8, 12, or 24 fibres in one connector; requires precise alignment; used for parallel optics |
9. When to Use Each Cable Type
Selecting the right cable for each situation is a core design and installation skill. The following table consolidates the key decision-making criteria:
| Scenario | Recommended Cable | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Desktop PC to office switch (standard office LAN) | Cat5e UTP straight-through | 100 m limit easily met; 1 Gbps sufficient; low cost |
| Switch to switch (same rack or room, <55 m) | Cat6 UTP (or Cat6a for 10G at <55 m) | Cat6 handles 10G at short distances; Cat6a extends 10G to full 100 m |
| Switch to switch in the same building, <100 m, 10G required | Cat6a UTP or OM3/OM4 multimode fibre | Cat6a handles 10G at 100 m; fibre avoids alien crosstalk in dense cable runs |
| Building-to-building connection (50–500 m) | Multimode fibre (OM3 or OM4) | Exceeds copper 100 m limit; EMI immune for outdoor runs; OM3/OM4 supports 10G at these distances |
| Building-to-building connection (>500 m) | Single-mode fibre | Multimode distance limit exceeded; SMF handles km-range links |
| WAN / metro Ethernet / service provider link | Single-mode fibre | Long distances (km to hundreds of km) only achievable with SMF |
| Console / out-of-band management access to Cisco device | Rollover (console) cable RJ45 to DB9/USB | Specifically designed for RS-232 console access; not Ethernet |
| High-EMI environment (factory floor, near motors) | STP (shielded) UTP or fibre | Shielding or immunity required to prevent data corruption from electromagnetic interference |
| Data centre server-to-ToR switch (<10 m), 25G/40G | DAC (Direct Attach Copper) twinax cable or OM4 fibre | DAC is lower cost and lower latency for very short runs; OM4 for slightly longer distances |
| PoE (Power over Ethernet) for IP phones and APs | Cat5e minimum; Cat6 or Cat6a recommended for PoE+ and PoE++ | Higher categories have better thermal performance for power delivery; Cat6a specified for PoE++ (IEEE 802.3bt). See Interface Configuration for enabling PoE on switch ports. |
10. Cable Testing and Common Faults
After installation, cables must be tested to verify correct wiring, adequate signal level, and compliance with category specifications. For software-side interface troubleshooting, see show interfaces and Troubleshooting Connectivity.
| Test / Fault | Description | Tool |
|---|---|---|
| Wire map test | Verifies that each pin at one end connects to the correct pin at the other — detects opens, shorts, reversed pairs, and split pairs | Cable tester (e.g., Fluke LinkRunner, Ideal Networks) |
| Length measurement (TDR) | Time Domain Reflectometry — sends a pulse down the cable and measures the time for a reflection to return; determines cable length and locates breaks | Cable certifier with TDR (e.g., Fluke DTX) |
| Attenuation (insertion loss) | Signal strength lost over the cable length — must remain below the limit for the category | Cable certifier |
| NEXT (Near-End Crosstalk) | Interference between pairs measured at the same end as the signal injection — higher value = better | Cable certifier |
| Alien crosstalk (ANEXT) | Interference from adjacent cables in the same bundle — critical for Cat6a 10G and dense patch panel runs | Cable certifier |
| Split pair | Wires from different pairs terminated together — appears correct on a simple continuity test but fails crosstalk testing because twisted pairs are broken | Cable certifier (simple testers may miss this) |
| Optical power meter | Measures light power level at the far end of a fibre link — confirms sufficient power for the transceiver's receiver sensitivity | Optical power meter + light source |
11. Cable Types Quick-Reference Summary
| Concept | Key Fact |
|---|---|
| Max copper segment length (all categories) | 100 m (90 m horizontal run + 10 m patch cables) |
| Cat5e max speed | 1 Gbps at 100 m (100 MHz) |
| Cat6 max speed | 1 Gbps at 100 m; 10 Gbps at up to 55 m (250 MHz) |
| Cat6a max speed | 10 Gbps at full 100 m (500 MHz) |
| T568B pin 1 colour | White/Orange |
| T568A pin 1 colour | White/Green |
| Straight-through cable ends | Both T568A or both T568B (same standard on both ends) |
| Crossover cable ends | One end T568A, other end T568B |
| Rollover (console) cable | Pins fully reversed (1↔8, 2↔7, 3↔6, 4↔5); RS-232 serial; Cisco console access |
| Auto-MDIX | Modern switches auto-detect cable type — crossover not required in practice |
| Multimode fibre max distance (OM4 at 10G) | 400 m |
| Single-mode fibre typical max distance | 40 km standard; further with amplifiers |
| SMF core diameter | 8–10 µm; yellow jacket; laser light source |
| MMF core diameter | 50 or 62.5 µm; orange or aqua jacket; LED/VCSEL source |
| Most common fibre connector in enterprise | LC (Lucent Connector) — used in SFP/SFP+ transceivers |