The Shunyata Research OMEGA-X-Ethernet Cable


frank009

@grunge1000 

Dude, all I said was I heard a difference between using a 16 gauge wire and a 12 gauge wire. I never mentioned a name or a price.

To quote a wise man, “enjoy your toast.”

@brianlucey 

Thanks for your opinion. 

Short has its scientific reasons, its not really a religious reason. 

Longer can work too if you want to use the cable as a filter. 

You choose! 

Good luck

 

@ejh369 

👍, it does though help if you know what you are trying to filter out…or add as additional distortion

@antigrunge2 

Yes, I agree with you. 

I did a simple AI query on the reasons to use shorter cables. We all agree AI can make mistakes, but I think the response is solid smiley

Making an electric conductor (like a LAN cable) as short as possible minimizes signal degradation and electrical losses. Keeping data cables short ensures high-speed performance and reliability. [1, 2, 3, 4]

🔴 Attenuation and Signal Loss

  • Resistance: Longer wires have higher electrical resistance.
  • Voltage Drop: Resistance causes signal voltage to drop over distance.
  • Energy Dissipation: Heat loss increases with longer cable lengths.
  • High Frequency: Network signals use high frequencies that decay faster. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

🔴 Capacitance and Inductance

  • Parasitic Capacitance: Long parallel wires naturally store unwanted electrical charge.
  • Signal Distortions: This stored charge rounds off sharp digital pulses.
  • Inductance: Longer wires create a stronger unwanted magnetic field.
  • Impedance Mismatch: Increased length alters the cable's native impedance. [1, 2, 3]

🔴 Interference and Noise

  • Antenna Effect: Longer cables act like large antennas picking up noise.
  • EMI: Cables absorb more Electromagnetic Interference from nearby electronics.
  • Crosstalk: Internal wires bleed signals into adjacent wires over distance.
  • SNR Drop: Signal-to-Noise Ratio decreases as noise accumulates along the length. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

🔴 Propagation Delay and Timing

  • Latency: Electrical signals take time to travel down a conductor.
  • Phase Shifting: High-frequency components shift out of sync over distance.
  • Jitter: Timing variations increase, causing data packet errors.
  • Collision Detection: Ethernet protocols rely on strict timing windows to manage data. [1, 2, 3]