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Comparison among Different LAN Standards

The difference among various LAN standards lies on their way of communication. The most popular and common standards are as follow:
  1.        10base-2
  2.        10base-5
  3.        10base-T2
  4.        100base-TX
  5.        1oobase-T4
  6.        100base-T2
  7.        1000base-T
Etc.

Some differences among them are pointed below:

 10base-2
  • IEEE 802.3a standard
  • Speed 10Mbps per second.
  • Use thin (RG-58A/U) coaxial cable for transmission medium.
  • Use T-type BNC connector as attachment media.
  • Same cable used for transmitting and receiving.
  • Not possible to extend without breaking service.                      
10base-5              
  • IEEE 802.3 standard
  • Speed 10Mbps per second.
  • Use thick (RG-8) coaxial cable for transmission medium.
  • Use T-type BNC connector as attachment media. 
  • Same cable used for transmitting and receiving.
  • Not possible to extend without breaking service. 
  • Encoding system is described as Manchester

10base-T2          
  • IEEE 802.3i standard
  • Speed 10Mbps per second.
  • Use CAT-3 UTP cables for transmission medium.
  • Use only two pairs of cable.
  • Use one pair for transmitting and another for receiving.
  • Use RJ-45 connector as attachment media.
  • Transmit 4 bits per symbol.
  • Can be extended without breaking service
100base-T4     
  • IEEE 802.3u standard
  • Speed 100Mbps per second.
  • Use CAT-3 or higher UTP cables for transmission medium. 
  • Use all four pairs of cable.
  • Only half duplex capable
  • Use one pair for transmitting and another for receiving and the rest two pairs direction switched.
  • Use RJ45 connector as attachment media.
  • 5 level encoding (8B6T binary encoding system) is used
  • Can extend without breaking service

100base-TX         
  • IEEE 802.3u standard
  • Speed 100Mbps per second.
  • Use CAT-5 or higher UTP cables for transmission medium.
  • Use only two pairs of cable.
  • Full duplex capable
  • Use one pair for transmitting and another for receiving.
  • Use RJ45 connector as attachment media.
  • Transmits 4bits per symbol
  • 3 level encoding (4B5B binary) system is used which is described as MLT-3, sometimes called NRZI-3
  • Can extend without breaking service
                               
100base-T2        
  • IEEE 802.3y standard
  • Use CAT-3 or higher UTP cables for transmission medium.
  • Speed 100Mbps per second.
  • Use only two pairs of cable.
  • Full duplex capable
  • Use both pair simultaneously either for transmitting or receiving media.
  • Map 4-bit nibbles to 2 symbol code-groups described as PAM5
  • Can extend without breaking service

1000base-T        
  •  IEEE 802.3ab standard
  • Speed 1000Mbps or 1 gigabit per second.
  • Use all four pairs of cable.
  • Full duplex capable
  • CAT-5, CAT-5e or CAT-6 UTP cables required.
  • 8B1Q4 Map 8-bit bytes to 4-symbol code-groups, one symbol is sent on each pair. It is described as 4D-PAM5.
  • 1000BASE-TX is a simplified version of 1000base-T which use CAT-3 UTP cable and PAM-3 technique.

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