No subject
Tue Jan 17 15:36:28 EST 2012
electrons, is just like a hose filled with water...turn on the tap, and the
water comes out the end pretty much instantly no matter how long the hose is
(well ok there is some lag), but the actual water that went in the hose when
you turned it on may take a couple of seconds to come out
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-melbwireless at wireless.org.au
[mailto:owner-melbwireless at wireless.org.au]On Behalf Of Stygen
Sent: Tuesday, 12 August 2003 5:26 PM
To: melbwireless at wireless.org.au
Subject: Re: [MLB-WIRELESS] Whats Faster ??
On Tue, 2003-08-12 at 14:24, Matt Pearce wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> I am wondering what is faster for transfering data. ie. Out of Wireless
> (2.4Ghz), Copper (Cat5e etc) and Fibre Optic, which signal travels the
> fastest from point A to point B ??
>
> Matt.
>
There is two different questions here.
A) What is faster for transferring data?
Both Fiber Optic and Copper wired networks can be 10, 100, or 1000 Mbps
depending on your hardware. 802.11b runs at 11Mbps half duplex (little
bit less). So the cat-5 and fiber optic transfer speed is much faster
than 2.4GHz networking using currently available hardware.
B) Speed through medium.
It wouldn't surprise you to hear that Fiber Optic data travels at the
speed of light in plastic (for the sake of argument there is very little
difference between the speed in air). 2.4GHz also travels at the speed
of light. The best way to explain this is to compare it to UV light.
You understand that UV light travels from the sun at the speed of
light.. well the waves used by 2.4GHz gear travels at comparable speeds,
it is the same form of energy, but with a wavelength about a million
times larger.
Cat5 carries a maximum of 100MHz signal through copper. I could be well
wrong here, but my assumption is that the signal is carried through the
copper as per current, which involves electrons. Since it is being
transmitted via matter rather than through it, my assumption is that the
speed would be more like the speed of sound. Correct me if wrong..
anyone.
-Stygen
To unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo at wireless.org.au
with "unsubscribe melbwireless" in the body of the message
To unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo at wireless.org.au
with "unsubscribe melbwireless" in the body of the message
More information about the Melbwireless
mailing list