Data cable needs for best performance. Cat X?


Question about data cable bandwidth.

Is there a data cable standard that would be considered 'future' proof - at least for current data streaming demands?

Is Cat 6a enough?  Or is Cat7 or Cat8 needs just around the corner? 

Not considering the differentials between manufactures and the differences in actual performance... but from a standard data pipeline pov... is Cat 6 standard enough? Or should one hold out until the boutique brands start releasing Cat7 / 8 data cables... 

I see many lauding $300-$1000 data cables... but as I understand it - they are cat 6 cables which is not the latest data standard available today... 

Has anyone actually done any a/b comparison between Cat6/7/8 to see if there is a real world benefit?

Unlike ICs - I don't see data cables being an investment if streaming more data will require upgrades in data cables every few years to realize the benefit of such data availability.




lightfighter2018

Showing 3 responses by sleepwalker65

Consider the bandwidth limitations of your Internet service. Chances are you will never exceed 1Gb/s. Cat 5 will easily accommodate your needs, but cat 5e is the minimum you can commercially obtain these days. Cat 6 or higher is just a waste of money. Think of it this way: if you are driving your family of 4 around, why would you buy a greyhound bus? I would caution you to avoid the temptation to make your own cables. Just buy factory made cables from Leviton or Hubbel. 
4K will only become a reality in streaming with compression. Native bandwidth is 6gb/s, but with J2K compression it comes down to 800mb/s. The new SMPTE standards (1 yr old) are just being extended to include compression and we could see a published and ratified standard soon. Problem for streaming is broadband Internet infrastructure caps off at 50mb/s to 100mb/s where ftth is not available. That limits the market potential for consumer delivery of 4K streaming. It is, however breathing new life back into DTH, which doesn’t exactly have the same bandwidth issues although it does do compression.