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A.
The length limits are not for the particular cables as such,
they are for the type of data signal that they carry.
Let me try and explain!
Thinnet (RG58 coax) was used for 10Base2 Ethernet, at 10Mbps
on RG58 coax Ethernet can reliably operate upto a distance of
185m. The native cabling environment of the AS400 is Twinax
and the standard operating speed is only 1Mbps. At this speed
it has a maximum distance of 1800m, however, if Cat 5 forms
part or all of the link the distance can drop to between 36m
and 364m.
So for a proprietary network such as Thinnet, the distance is
set at the maximum length that the signal will work reliably
at a given speed over a given type of cable. So far so good!
Now, when we talk about Cat 5, 5e, 6 etc. these are cabling
'Standards' which define a method of connecting all types of
networking protocols, over a cabling system that uses a common
media, common connectors and a common topology. So the length
limit was arbitrarily set for the worst case scenario. 10BaseT
may well work on Cat 5 for 150m but ATM, AS400, Token Ring etc.
may not, and because a structured cabling system has to work
for all networking methods, a limit had to be set.
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